Thank you for your kind words about the Library of Parliament. I know it's always music to the librarian's ears; he is very proud of the reputation that the Library of Parliament has been able to build over time.
In terms of how we will work, partly, as Mr. Sabourin said, we have a bit of a blank sheet. We're working out the business model right now. The business model, in terms of how we interact with committees, how we interact with members, and how we interact with even the Library of Parliament, is something for which we're looking at different options.
One of the easiest options for us to look at, in terms of the relationship with committees, is to work within the current Library of Parliament model, in just the same way. You have requests that come from committees or from individual members on costing bills; there's an established process right now. Work that is of a cost nature or an estimates nature or that deals specifically with economic analysis of fiscal forecasting—very much within the mandate of the parliamentary budget office—will be steered to one single window, towards us. That is definitely one model we're looking at right now.