Thank you for the question.
As we've heard tonight, there are many different allegations of Canadian companies not respecting human rights. If anybody spends an afternoon on the Internet googling Canadian mining companies, they'll find all kinds of allegations of harm, of environmental degradation. Do I know if all of those are credible? No. Does anybody on this committee know if they're all credible? No.
I think that's exactly the purpose of a credible ombudsperson, to be able to investigate specific complaints and to investigate them properly so that Canadian companies that are behaving well can get out from under the cloud of these lingering allegations.
The situation we have now is that the allegations linger and linger and they're never really addressed because there is no credible CORE to investigate.
To answer Ms. McPherson's question, I think the impact is that all Canadian companies are dragged down. Investors are starting to look at the ESG factors more and more carefully, and we don't want the good Canadian companies to be tinged with the negativity—and there is a lot of negativity out there.
The whole point is to try to separate the real from the complaints, because many people have complaints, but not all of them are on human rights violations, by any stretch of the imagination. As we speak, we just don't know, so that's the reason we need a really empowered CORE. I think it will be good for all of us. It will be good for the financial industry, which will be able to make reasoned judgments on which companies are really respecting human rights. It will be good for companies that want to raise money. It will be good for workers, and it will be good for communities.