Okay.
One of the critiques or concerns you've raised is the implementation.
I would clearly, particularly as an opposition member, put much of the fault for that with the government of the day. They make a commitment; you audit that commitment and find it lacking—as Ms. Gélinas did on numerous occasions—and the government doesn't act upon your recommendations; it essentially goes against the auditor's word.
It's something—for me, anyway, in the private sector—I'd never encountered before I came to Parliament: that the auditor's comments were just refused outright by departments, or ignored, or delayed over time.
We have to take a look at the climate change file in particular. I can remember—and I have the reports here—recommendations, and then recommendations, and things getting continually worse.
One of the concerns you raised was around that implementation. I would find a great deal more fault with the government of the day and the current government than with Madame Gélinas or her office for recommending it. That's where it lies.
But the critique you raised—and this is what I want to get to—is that there's a visibility question. I'm confused by that, because particularly over the last six to twelve months the Commissioner of the Environment's report has received a great deal of attention and notice. It's certainly driven much of what this committee has been up to.