I'd like to just make two comments following on that.
If it is possible for this committee or Parliament to take the kind of responsible action that really does need to be taken, then simply publishing data more frequently is not going to do the job. Status of Women Canada has over the decades produced hundreds of detailed expert reports, has collected a huge database of gender-based analysis tools of every possible kind, as well as comparative literature, etc., which has been the mainstay of academic and social policy research on the part of people working in this area all across this country and around the globe. Sometime between December 10 and about a month ago, it was all removed from the Status of Women Canada's web page. It took myself and our reference librarian a good hour and a half before we could find it in an obscure, unindexed, inaccessible, non-usable, unfriendly government archive some place off in a corner. The human technical capacity to solve the problems that need to be solved has been removed from the reach of not just the public but also the academic and technical sphere as well.