Thank you to the chair and to the clerk for allowing that to come forward.
I apologize to the witnesses who are here today.
I'll start with Porter Airlines, please, because I have had very interesting conversations with you before, Mr. Deluce.
Previously, the opinion of your airline, in my conversations with you, has been different from that of the other major airlines—and I will include you as a major airline—in that the other airlines were advocating strongly, in a sense, to have things such as rapid testing implemented on arrival, and it really seemed as though for several months you accepted the position of the government, as you saw, that this is just a brief period of time to get through, when really, we're seeing now that it's not. It's being extended indefinitely into the future, even beyond the vaccine, as we're hearing this week.
I'm wondering how your ideas and strategy have changed, given that something that should have been finite with the tools that are available to us and that were available to this government—rapid testing, testing on arrival, and vaccines, which, as we all know, are being so poorly distributed by this government. How has this changed, given the complete uncertainty and the uncertainty as to when this will pass in terms of a return to normal, frankly, for Canadians in the airline sector, as well?