If you want me to respond on the issue of the procurement in this case, I would say I'm always worried that we're going to learn the wrong lessons from a scandal. I will tell you that for the average charity receiving maybe....This is not even average, but about a quarter of charities receive government money. They receive over $160 billion from three different levels of government—mainly not federal, mainly provincial—and the amount of bureaucracy that goes into government funding is quite high. It's extreme in some cases.
When you have a $100,000 grant, you have a two-year process of filling in forms and other things. It's very extreme and it takes a lot of due diligence. Most government grants are done very well. This is completely atypical, in that it's such a quick amount, such a large amount, and then it's basically going to a shell corporation and things like that.
I would just say we want to learn. If anything, I would learn from this that this sort of thing shouldn't happen, but in fact we need to look at the whole system. That certainly applies to smaller grants from governments when they are giving away $50,000 or $100,000. There's probably too much scrutiny—