Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank our witnesses for being here this morning and for sharing their expertise with us.
I must say that, since the beginning of this study on aviation safety, I have been feeling like a ping-pong ball. Two opposing views have been presented to us. On the one hand, Judge Moshansky is telling us that the situation is so critical as to warrant a public inquiry to shed light on this issue. On the other hand, Transport Canada is saying that safety has never been better and that, even with an increased number of flights, there are apparently fewer incidents.
In light of your earlier testimony, some of the elements seem questionable, even contradictory to me. For example, it was said that oversight or document verification by inspectors is as effective and produces the same outcome in terms of safety as if inspectors were carrying out an inspection on the ground. That's at least what I understood from one of Mr. Mahon's comments. It seems to me that those are two completely different types of inspections.
I will put my first question to Mr. Maybee. I will first establish the context. On August 17, 2016, Transport Canada implemented a policy whereby Canadian airports are no longer subject to a comprehensive assessment of the safety management system. Unless I am mistaken, airports will now be subject to partial inspections that the department refers to as “program validation inspections” or “process or procedure inspections”. So, instead of evaluating an airport's 10 most important activities, Transport Canada will evaluate sometimes one, or sometimes a few, but not all of the activities.
As you probably know, that decision was made and published in an internal process bulletin—in other words, without informing parliamentarians or the public of the decision. Were you aware of that Transport Canada directive at the time, Mr. Maybee?