We have separated the financial aspect of that, in terms of reporting and in terms of keeping statistics, from everything else. I don't know what the system is here, but every year the officers of the legislature are required to go before the finance committee and present a budget, and on that basis uniformly be told there is no money. Then everybody goes away and we come back the next year.
But in the course of all that we have to defend, and we should have to defend, how we're spending the money and how effective it is, which is why the statistics that I referred to are kept. If we're claiming a certain amount of money for wages and for administration and we're not providing statistics about how we're delivering those services and how often and so on, then there's a disconnect. That's why we keep those statistics and that's why, in my view, that financial process is important.
I'm very reluctant to take the step that I think you're suggesting. I mentioned incidentally that I think this committee's presence is of some great assistance and it is because you are the real world. While everybody reports to parliaments or legislatures, you can't possibly get feedback except in these kinds of circumstances, which are very helpful.
I'm not sure that answers your question, but that's how we deal with it in terms of showing people that they're getting value for service.