Thank you for the question.
I will start by picking up on my answer to the previous member's question about records management practices. To summarize what I was trying to say—I'm not sure I did that effectively—there are rules for records management. Whether you're an employee of the public service or an employee of a minister's office, you're expected to follow those rules. When you leave, you're expected to have organized your documents, so that the ones that are required to be preserved are there and set aside separately, and the ones that are not necessary can be deleted to make room in the server so that computer systems function efficiently.
Now, your question about backup is a very good question, and thank you for asking it. I particularly appreciate your linkage to disaster recovery, because the Government of Canada, in the Treasury Board guidelines, actually has a requirement that all government departments—and now with the support of Shared Services Canada, our colleagues who will be before you after me—have a backup capacity for that very purpose.
So we have a backup capacity, the purpose of which is to assist in disaster recovery, in business continuity. Different departments have that backup capacity for varying periods of time. The Privy Council Office—