Thank you so much, Chair.
I thank Mr. Fadden for being here.
I was reflecting as you spoke that I guess part of your retirement plan is knowing that you'll be spending a great deal of time in committees with us. Thank you for your service, and thank you for your continued service in committees in the House of Commons.
I found it interesting, in the short testimony that you gave today, when you talked about national security not being consistent—please correct me if I get anything wrong when you respond—and said that, obviously, in some of these circumstances, people are not as worried as they could or might be. The challenge, of course, is that there's no training or awareness. That really must decrease across the board. I think some of the examples you gave as you were answering another member's question were very telling, about people using personal information in a way that could be problematic.
I'm just wondering, in terms of this, how often during your term CSIS reached out to departments and agencies to build resilience to these types of threats. Does the federal government have an established process, or is it ad hoc? You talked about it being inconsistent, so I would just like some more information on that.