Thank you.
Ms. Lemay, this was before my time on the committee, but you appeared in July of 2016 when the size and scale of the Phoenix fiasco was just beginning to be recognized. It was an emergency meeting held in the summer. I understand that my colleague Mr. McCauley asked you then who was going to be fired, and you had rightly pointed out that fixing the problem perhaps needed to be the priority.
Here we are two and a half years later and the problems all still exist. We now have an Auditor General's report, which we are discussing today, that largely placed the blame for the fiasco on three executives and the way they had controlled information and failed to convey critical information to the then deputy minister and minister.
In light of your remarks earlier, in which you said that two executives weren't paid bonuses and are no longer working in payroll administration, at a minimum, could you at least assure Canadians who rightly, as you acknowledged in your remarks, are demanding accountability that the executives who gave us the Phoenix fiasco are at least no longer employed in the public service?