Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I always enjoy, although not everyone does, dissecting the budget. I really enjoy it, because I have 15,000 questions. Maybe I have an oppositional disorder, I don't know.
I’m going to set the budget aside a little bit, as much as I like to dissect it, and I'm going to focus on one of the Treasury Board responsibilities for federal buildings. There comes a time when a building has to be disposed of, and a bill of sale is then made to an agent. I'm thinking of one building in particular. You may not be able to give me details on this specific case, but I'm wondering about the process. It has surely been done very well, and that's not the problem, but this building is being sold at one‑tenth of its value. It's a heritage building, and there's no provision to oblige a future buyer to keep it in place.
Is it usual for heritage buildings to be sold at a tenth of their value and without consideration for the heritage?