Thank you for the question.
What we call the resulting contracts.... When a procurement is made publicly available for competition, the solicitation that's issued includes a copy of the contract. That's how the public can see what the potential contract will likely look like.
As we mentioned, once the contract is awarded, information regarding the contract is made publicly available on proactive disclosure, but the specific contract and its minutes themselves are not. Typically, that information is considered commercially confidential information under the Access to Information Act. It can be called upon. There may be a provision of some information if requested through the ATIP process, should the public be interested in a particular contract.