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Scott has worked on both the public and private sides of the telecom industry over the past 25 years, including as a registered lobbyist for satellite company Telesat Canada and Telus Corp. He is currently the executive director of government and regulatory affairs at Telesat and previously served as a vice president at Telus.

He left Telus for a stint as chief policy advisor at the CRTC in 2007 and 2008 as part of the government’s executive interchange program before returning to industry and joining Telesat in 2009. The rotation sparked allegations of conflict of interest in a CBC investigation, given he was still listed on the lobbyist registry while working at the CRTC. But Scott told the CBC he followed all of the rules.

Scott has also held executive positions at Call-Net Enterprises and the Canadian Cable Television Association. Before that, he worked for five years at both the CRTC and the Competition Bureau.

Simard’s background is in public institutions. She is currently legal counsel at the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development. She joined ISED in 2007 from the United Nations’ International Telecommunication Union in Switzerland, where she was hired as a senior telecommunications expert in 2004. Prior to that, she worked in academic institutions.

Sources told the Post the hiring attempted to strike the right balance between public and private experience as the industry transitions to the digital world.