Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Warawa, it certainly is proceeding. We have a group of about 40 or 45 environmentalists who are also auditors, who are highly motivated young men and women. We have a report due for October that is going to be the statutory work—work on petitions, work on SDSs, on sustainable development strategies—but we're also going to take a very detailed look at some of the SDSs, to get into some of the departments to find out whether in fact these SDSs are achieving what they were designed to achieve, which is to put the environment and sustainable development on management's table.
We also have a report coming that we're hard at work on for February, which is a retrospective, a look back over about ten years. We're going to look at key recommendations and observations made by the commissioners over the past decade, and we'll be reporting that to you in February.
What we want to do with that is get a sense of, I guess, at the end of the day, have governments taken the environment and sustainable development seriously? One measure of that is the extent to which action has been taken on issues that we've raised and recommendations that we have made.
Looking beyond that, we have a plan that we've developed over the past several months. We know what we would like to report in subsequent years, and I'd like an opportunity, actually, to talk to individual members at some point to review with you the plan that we've evolved to date.
But the commissioner's office is alive and well, and the audits are on target.