Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and I want to thank all of the witnesses for advocating on behalf of all their members.
I, along with the chair, represent a region that has a tourist industry, and anything connected to the tourist industry, but especially airlines, has been devastated by this because ultimately we're telling Canadians to stay at home. That is because we want to control the spread and that is the least risky thing to do. Every time we step outside of our house, the level of risk increases.
We heard from the National Airlines Council, which lobbies on behalf of the big airlines. I was a little worried about what I heard from them when we asked them about refunds, regional routes, maintaining aerospace contracts, executive compensation, opening their books and hiring back employees as conditions. They really skated through those things. I do take the point of Mr. Lesosky that that's between us and the airlines, but I think it's important to state that everyone in this room and everyone on this call wants to see compensation for the airlines and wants a successful industry, but there are steps that we have to go through.
I have a question for a few of the witnesses. We've heard it in the past about rapid testing and [Technical difficulty—Editor] side of it and we've heard that there is up to a 30% negative rate.
Is this an effective way to reboot the airline industry, with that level of error? Is that going to be effective? I believe it was Mr. Rauenbusch, Mr. Lesosky and Mr. Dias who brought that up.
I'll direct that to Mr. Rauenbusch.