Thanks, Madam Chair.
Thanks, Ms. Hogan and your staff, for being here. Thanks to my colleagues for a great meeting and great discussions.
I want to build on some of the areas that Mr. Lawrence and Mr. Green were touching on, which was how we work better together and what we could do to help your work. You're definitely helping our work with some of what you're discussing today.
There are two areas for me in terms of how we work together. One is SWOT analysis. It's something I lived and breathed for about 30 years in business. The particular part of the SWOT analysis is the threats as you're auditing.
We had an impassioned discussion about indigenous water supply and clean water for all Canadians. One of the threats that the elders brought up with me—one elder in particular in Sioux Lookout—was to stop making the water dirty and then we would have a better shot at having clean water. There are things like the clean water agency or ways to stop water pollution at its source. You look at the process, but the actual threat might be outside the process.
Could you comment, Ms. Hogan, on how we could address the external threats to the audits you're performing?