The department answered and replied to each one of her observations and recommendations. What I said earlier about leasing versus purchasing, she didn't disagree with me. What she had said, you'll recall, is that there was one particular instance when we renewed a five-year lease so many times that had we bought it on day one, we would have saved taxpayers a lot of money. What I told her is that it comes with responsibilities. If you want us to own more assets, then collectively we have to conduct ourselves accordingly. In that sense, I don't disagree with her. I think every single thing she noticed, I don't disagree with, because each is an observation.
If I'm allowed to comment on one—which I'm sure Madame Marleau noticed when she was in my position a few years ago—it is that the average length of a lease is way too short. Given our creditworthiness, we should be signing longer-term leases. Signing five-year leases and then renewing them one year at a time for an extra seven years is, frankly, not very good for taxpayers; it's not very good management.