Thank you, Madam Chair. I would like to welcome the witnesses joining us this evening.
My first questions are for Ms. Maxwell, from Evidence for Democracy.
I read the report your organization released back in November. It provided a progress update on each of the 35 recommendations in the Naylor report. In fact, this spring, April to be precise, will mark the fifth anniversary of the report.
In the report, you conclude that the Liberal government has implemented only nine of the 35 recommendations in the past five years. One of the main recommendations in the report was the creation of a Canada research coordinating committee. A call for applications was put out in 2019, but no progress has been made since.
You should know, Ms. Maxwell, that I asked Canada's chief science advisor, Mona Nemer, about that very thing, but I didn't get an answer. She didn't know what I was talking about. In February, I also brought it up to Dr. Nipun Vats, the assistant deputy minister of science and research, who was supposed to get back to the committee with an answer. Unfortunately, a month later, we have yet to receive it. We want to know what is happening at the department with that call for applications.
This is my question. In the wake of the Naylor report recommendations, how does this lack of progress hurt the competitiveness and productivity of Canada's science ecosystem?