Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I share Mr. Coderre's thoughts. It's unfortunate that certain replacements on the committee haven't really raised the level of debate.
One thing struck me when I heard the questions Mr. Coderre talked about. I want to make a point: collusion is collusion; bad behaviour is bad behaviour. If it's bad, you call it out. I don't care who does it. I don't care where it comes from. I don't care whether it comes from people who are associated with closed shops or people who are associated with open shops. Bad behaviour is bad behaviour and you call it out. I don't think that is the issue here. I don't think it's a matter of union is bad and non-union is good. That is not the intention of this study. I want it to be clear that from my perspective, that has to be said.
I want to get back to what the topic is actually supposed to be about, which is a study on how competition can make infrastructure dollars go further.
I'll start with you, Mr. Oakey. You mentioned in your testimony—I apologize, it was either you or Mr. Pamic, and you'll correct me—that some 900,000 out of 1,260,000 Canadian workers are in the open-shop sector. That's roughly 72%. I'm trying to understand the percentage. Have you done any study to know whether the open shops get about 72% of the overall work in Canada? Do you have any sense of where your percentage falls in terms of the work done?