Yes. At the same time as B.C. was doing work on their act, there were members sitting on the CGSB who did not disclose to CGSB that B.C. was working on developing an act, and vice versa. They did not tell the B.C. government that they were working with CGSB to develop a national standard. There's a huge conflict there with being transparent in the process. If you look at the members that were a part of those organizations, both CGSB and the provincial government, you see 95% of them were all aligned with one organization, whether directly or indirectly. Where's the fairness in that? There isn't, because the end-user suffers.
On June 14th, 2021. See this statement in context.