Not every single one; there are so many commitments made by departments--we cover more than 30 departments--we take a selection. We will be reporting on a selection of those, and we will be commenting on whether the progress has been satisfactory or unsatisfactory.
If I may, Mr. Chair, I'll add a quick other point in terms of an earlier question. One of the questions that have come up several times is regarding the fact that we share information with departments prior to the time that we table a report in Parliament. I just want to make it clear that this isn't because we think the departments are a more important audience. Parliament is clearly our client. The reason we do that sharing of information with the departments is simply because that's a required part of our audit process. We can't complete a report until we've verified the facts with the department.
Inevitably an audit is very much a discussion back and forth with departmental officials. That's why they're privy to that information prior to parliamentarians being privy.
Thank you.