Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks again, witnesses, for being present in our study in relation to SDTC today.
We have heard a lot of testimony in relation to the mechanisms that resulted in, largely, a very severe instance of continued conflict of interest by Ms. Verschuren and the ways in which that was allowed to continue. I think the Ethics Commissioner did a good job of pointing out the very large discrepancies between what he had witnessed, in terms of the lack of ability to maybe understand the rules and requirements under legislation, and, in fact, what had happened.
We heard today from our witnesses that these persons, when appointed, were well informed about the requirements under the act, about the necessary requirement for recusal and about the important piece of declaring conflict of interest prior to making decisions, but we're still left with a really large question as to why Ms. Verschuren did it.
From my perspective, it's largely either self-interest or ignorance. The claim today of ignorance was one I sought to investigate, and I got, I think, some more clarity as to how much information these applicants truly have in relationship to the work they're asked to do. However, the result was still this very terrible situation happening in which Ms. Verschuren was able to essentially not play by the rules and to get personal benefit. That shouldn't be allowed. That cannot be allowed as we continue.
How do we fix this? How does the process of appointment play a role in making certain this never happens again?
Ms. McClymont, that's a question I'd ask you to answer in terms of what you could do better, what the department could do better or what the Privy Council could do better to avoid these conflicts of interest after appointment.
I think your prior comments in relation to opportunities to further review their conflicts may be part of that process, and I would encourage that. I think the more ways we can encourage more check-ins on conflict reviews, the better in this case, because we're dealing with hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars of taxpayer money. It requires the most severe level of oversight, and it requires, I think, a more proper investigation and review and a continued review of those persons after they're appointed, not just when they're appointed. You could almost call it a probationary period.
Would you comment on that, please, and on the need for real change in how we actually get these appointments done and when these appointments are reviewed?