Certainly, Madam Commissioner.
When the commissioner completes an investigation in relation to the Lobbyists' Code of Conduct, the reports are required under the Lobbying Act to be tabled before each house of Parliament. Then it sits with each house of Parliament. So there is no criminal sanction for breach of the code, such as a fine or imprisonment. The matter stands referred to the houses of Parliament. As the commissioner mentioned, the house of Parliament could ask the commissioner to explain the report or consider the report at a meeting of a committee such as this one.
In 2007 the commissioner's predecessor, the Registrar of Lobbyists, completed four reports on the lobbying activities of one very busy lobbyist. They were filed and tabled before both houses of Parliament, but I don't think the committee took it upon itself to do more with those reports following their tabling.