Effectively, we received the complaint on February 16. It was a voluminous complaint. I'm just making a factual observation. There was a lot of detail in there. It took a bit of time to digest it and determine what the obvious next steps would be.
The other thing is that we were aware, because we'd consulted other colleagues in government, that the complainant had made representations to other organizations. There were conceivably at least two or three potential leads to pursue in a fact-finding, investigatory process.
For example, as I mentioned, there is a minority of members who were appointed by the Governor in Council. Some of the allegations concern the behaviour of the board and the chair. There was a question: If there were to be fact-finding, would it be something led by ISED, or would it be something led, for example, by the Privy Council Office? They ultimately manage the process for government appointees. We had to do an internal government consultation to determine who was on first. The judgment was that ISED should take the baton and do the investigation.
We issued a contract to RCGT on March 17. I should say that the minister was briefed well prior to that. There was a period between February 16 and the end of February when we did those internal consultations and reviewed the documentation. The minister was briefed in the first week of March. Then we issued a contract to RCGT on March 17, to execute the fact-finding review.