Mr. Chairman, I want to correct something, as far as the information I have is concerned. In fact, I was the one who approached my parliamentary secretary to communicate with the chair and then to members of the committee the opportunity to present. I did not actually receive from this committee, though I'm sure it would have been coming, a demand or a request. I think we all assumed that this would be the primary item of attention, and I initiated that request.
I also received from Commissioner Zaccardelli his very clear intention. He informed me--I did not inform him--that he would be appearing before the media and any other venue once he and his officials had contemplated the report and had done the work they needed to do to make a responsible response to that report. He informed me that he would be doing that.
Further, if I can add to that, the development of this particular report and this investigation were some two and a half years in the making. I stand to be corrected, but some 65,000 documents were presented and there were more than 100 witnesses. Just the report that is available here is some quarter of a million words, 1,400 pages, and covers a variety of agencies.
For the record, Mr. Chairman, as I already indicated, within 24 hours of receipt of that report, which I received at the same time everybody else did, we were already moving on some of the recommendations. We indicated very clearly, out of respect for the huge amount of work that was done, that we needed time to digest this report, to look into it, to make sure we could move ahead with the recommendations.
I appreciate the fact that even though I was ready on Tuesday--I believe Commissioner Zaccardelli was also ready--we know that this good committee had to constitute itself, had to elect its chair, and had to do some work. So even though we were ready on Tuesday, you were here on Thursday. And I think that was very expeditious.