Mr. Chair, I'm going to start with a short overview and then I'm going to ask Ms. Cahill to talk a bit about our expenditures.
At the Privy Council Office, because we have no programs, we tend to travel a bit less than some of the other departments in town. We have some folks who obviously travel. Mr. Elcock—you were speaking with him before—travels extensively, usually on very short notice on gruelling flights and times and distances to not particularly hospitable locations, but the rest of us have a tendency to stay a bit closer to home.
I'm going to ask Karen to take you through our spending on travel. Wherever possible, we use video conferencing and teleconferencing. We're starting to take advantage of technologies like GCconnex, where we can talk internally through the government.
One of the things we do at the Privy Council Office is, of course, coordination and so we make sure that we try to piggyback onto other coordinating meetings. If we know we have a group of American officials in town to meet with Mr. Moloney on the Regulatory Cooperation Council or the Beyond the Border initiative, and the national security advisor wants to talk to his American counterparts, those might be the same folks, and that saves him a trip to Washington when he can just go down the street to 66 Slater and see Mr. Moloney.
We take advantage of technology, but we also work smart. We use our common sense to try to reduce how much we've spent on travel in the past year or so.
Karen, would you like to add to that?