That's a very good question. When the long-form census was done away with, we received complaints and did an investigation. I expressed my great concern about the loss of information that would represent.
What became clear in terms of the investigation that we did was that the institution was not at fault. Our investigative powers stop at the cabinet door, and as the resignation of Munir Sheikh demonstrated, this was not a decision that was made by a federal institution. It was made by federal cabinet.
I'll say just a word about the National Metropolis Conference. I have attended two of them and would have attended this one, except I had a planned holiday out of the country that was previously booked, unfortunately. I had hoped to be back on time. There was an event on the Wednesday night that marked the 50th anniversary of the launch of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism. Part of the tradition of the Metropolis Conference is to consider language issues as part of the pre-conference. Language has certainly been one of the continuing themes of those conferences, and I was sorry to miss that one.
Despite that, I think we will continue to be able to monitor the activities of the department. We're going to be doing an audit. It will be one of the institutions we will be looking at in detail in the years ahead, and we have certain capacity ourselves to conduct studies and to do investigations, even though, obviously, the lack of information that would have been there from the long-form census is unfortunate.