Absolutely. You've touched on another issue that we highlight with frequency, and that is the information that's shared in regret letters and the volume and the quality of information that's provided in debriefs. That's for active bidders who were unsuccessful in processes.
It's a matter of transparency and respect, so if that information is not shared with bidders—as you can imagine, these are oftentimes small and medium-sized businesses that expend resources, time and energy to bid on these proposals—then to ultimately be given a regret letter of one or two lines leaves people very unsatisfied and likely unwilling to participate.
It is an area where I think there is a renewed focus, as I mentioned. You heard me say that the Treasury Board contracting policy is migrating into the directive on procurement management. That directive is more explicit about the mandatory requirement for debriefs, so we are hopeful that there will be more debriefs.
Again, it speaks to the quality of those debriefs, so it is something that my office continues to say out loud to make sure that there are improvements.