Mr. Chair, may I jump in on this one for a moment?
To come back to more basic principles first, it's important to know that every procurement that the government undertakes over $2 million is subjected to a procurement review policy of the Treasury Board. So we go out and let other departments know—Industry Canada, Western Economic Diversification Canada, Quebec, ACOA, Fisheries and Oceans, DND, all of the interested people—that there is a procurement over $2 million, and they identify if there is something in their program that might benefit from this procurement as well. We'll see, at times, agreements in the Miramichi for armour for vehicles. So these things come up. Everything is out.
On procurements greater than $100 million, industrial benefits are dealt with as a distinct function. There are clauses written in the contracts to deal with the industrial and regional benefits. They are managed, they're followed, and we really look at things that are of direct benefit, as opposed to the toilet paper example.
There are stories of toilet paper, by all means. It goes back quite some time. Now you'll see windshields for vehicles or oil tanks, something much more specific, and they're specified in the contracts.