Mr. Chairman, thank you very much, and thank you to everybody in attendance.
Just to speak to GC InfoBase, the best I can say is that we at the library are very fortunate to have skilled practitioners. We have research librarians who have worked on it for years. What I can say is that even to a skilled practitioner, sometimes GC InfoBase is a bit of a tricky beast to manipulate. It's a lot of complicated information presented [Technical difficulty—Editor] with usage comes more experience and help. One thing I would recommend, if ever a member wishes to extract something, is to reach out to the library. We could put in a request to one of our very seasoned senior reference librarians, and they can find that stuff pretty easily.
Theoretically, it is publicly available, but it's just like anything. The example I like to use is tennis courts. Tennis courts are publicly available, but as much time as I spend on a tennis court, I might not ever get to win the Rogers Cup. I'm pretty good, but not that good. What I recommend is that we reach out to the reference librarians, and they're very good at that stuff. We get numerous requests on this. They know which tables the stuff is typically in and how to use it, and sometimes they can also reach out to the Treasury Board if they need clarification.
Mr. Chairman, if I'm [Technical difficulty—Editor] what Mr. Dong had, if I could indulge you time, Mr. Chairman, just very quickly.