Thank you. That is a very good question.
In terms of strategic procurement, I think one of the business strategies, if you could call it that, of our department is to move from people taking orders from other departments—simply filling orders and making contracts on an individual basis—to becoming more involved in organizing our avenues of supply. I think you'd call that a more strategic approach to procurement.
It involves taking the information we have on what the government as a whole buys, not just what a given manager buys, and looking at what those commodities are, who the suppliers of those commodities are in regions or countrywide, and how we define the commodity we want to buy in a way that will encourage a good proportion of small and medium-sized enterprises to participate, allow for aboriginal participation, allow for green procurement, allow for economy, and allow for cost savings.
That's where we want to turn our business.