I'll give you my comments just generally on that.
In the first report we put out, at the beginning of March, we basically laid out, budget item by budget item, the stage in the approval process that it was at and when the cash was expected to flow. We gave a fairly detailed summary for each item--where it was at; what it needed in terms of authorities; when those were expected to be received; when, in the case of benefits, the cheques were expected to flow; in the case of tax reductions, when people would see the effects on their paycheques; and in the case of specific programs, when we might see whatever the next stage was, such as agreements with provinces, or benefits flowing to Canadians.
So we've laid out a fairly specific and detailed timeline for program-by-program progress, if you will, toward delivering benefits and getting the money flowing. As my colleague has said, what Treasury Board has done is provide, then, once the proper authorities are obtained, the allocations to the departments--or departments can cash-manage, or wait until supplementary estimates A, but as per their own decisions--when they need to access that money.
Departments have given us, and the government as a whole has given, a fairly specific plan as to what your progress markers are, budget item by budget item. So I think that—