A PFAS analysis in a private laboratory costs between $350 and $500. So it is a question of budget. You need to have the money to do the analyses. You also need to have laboratories that have the right capacities for detecting PFAS. Good laboratories have to have slightly higher standards when it comes to detection limits.
Take the Bagotville site, as an example. The military and the people from Health Canada were not completely surprised to learn there was a problem. They may have been a bit surprised at the scope of the data I presented, but they were not completely surprised. They had their suspicious about potential risks.
There has to be a combination of two things: there have to be the budgets for doing environmental monitoring, but also compulsory transparency mechanisms, so the results are genuinely available and published. At present, they can be accessed, but it is a bit obscure.