Thank you, Chair, and thank you to everyone for being with us today.
Let me just say upfront that we certainly appreciate the fact that we've entered into this, no matter what the complexities, the heartache, headaches, and aches elsewhere that occur when the buck stops or the dog gets kicked—and hopefully not too often.
As my friend, Mr. Kramp, said in thanking you on behalf of his unit in his neck of the woods, I'm from Welland and so the Lincs and Winks are obviously very grateful as well. I send along their thanks for this, albeit some of them still have some issues about what this is, but they're one of many obviously.
So as part of this process that you're trying to get through, communication is a key ingredient because quite often you're right in what you said about the numbers. There's no question that you're wholly accurate about who's ready to retire and who needs to know now, and I'm glad to see you pulled that piece out and said, let's go do that first. It is about saying to all those folks, “We hear what you're saying and we're trying to answer your questions.” How far along are you in that, because some issues raised by the Auditor General's report clearly say that communications just really weren't good?
I know you talked already about two websites eventually collapsing into one, albeit it sounds like they might still be there. So, Rear Admiral, could I get you to start with that.