Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I'm going back to the Access to Information Act. It states that you must make the manuals available to the offices so that the public can consult them. I was told that your website is in a way your physical location and that it could be accessible to the public. On that site, there's very little opportunity to get an enormous amount of information, in view of the fact that you have a lot of manuals. It would be virtually impossible to put all that on the Internet.
On the one hand, do you intend to find ways to adjust that? On the other hand, in the March 18 issue of La Presse, it was reported that someone had made an access to information request and had to wait six months after the initial request before the documents arrived in a used sport shoe box. Do you have so little money at Radio-Canada?
My third question again concerns that article. I'll jump to another theme, expense accounts. Reference was made, among other things, to Mr. Rabinovitch's expense accounts. It talked about reimbursements for limousines without invoices, invoices for $4,000 for five nights at a hotel and $7,500 claimed without an invoice. There was also talk about other individuals, not just Mr. Rabinovitch, in the Journal de Montréal, among others.
I would like to know whether you are going to travel by limousine and if we should expect equally enormous expenses, not just on your part—I don't know your current expenses—but on the part of various CBC/Radio-Canada executives? Can we expect a little more restraint?