I do just very briefly, Mr. Chairman.
There is a common-sense element to this, but the simple reality is that in a department that deals with 20,000 contracts or something per year, you need more than common sense. You actually do need policies, and you do need procedures.
I would not want to give the member any false hope that the outcome will be different, although, the policies and procedures will be different. We will spend more time at the front end of every project assessing its risks and threats, which is essentially how I interpret the Auditor General's concerns about the end use of the building and the life-cycle realities of what might happen in that building. But I would not want to give false hope in any way that applying that new set of policies and procedures would necessarily or absolutely lead to a different outcome on the classification of these blueprints. It would come out of a process. We have policies. We have procedures.
If you're asking us--