Well, with regard to our experience in the whole situation, I think it's frankly embarrassing. The whole whistle-blowing process basically proves to us that there's a two-tier system that exists. If you are a normal, regular Canadian citizen and you go to your government to complain that, hey, there is wrongdoing happening, and you risk your career and your professional reputation, they don't even do anything about it.
This whole fallacy that we were disgruntled and there was some sort of coercion with all of this happening...none of that's actually true, because we were patient. How does a fact-finding take seven months? That's factually incorrect, and they know it, because that turned into an investigation by June, and they continued to do it. What I find disgusting about this is that they continue to deny even the most basic level of truth.
When you talk about whistle-blowing, they never protected anyone, so for everyone who went to ISED as it relates to this, the thing they were definitive about was that you are not going to be protected from the federal government if anything happens from the backlash that would come from the SDTC executives or board members toward these employees.