This is true.
I told the committee then—and the Auditor General was sitting next to me—that I thought she was being a little bit unkind when she characterized the way the department was carrying out its responsibilities. You don't necessarily need to have a formal plan with three gold stamps on it to mean that you're coordinated and know what you're doing.
Since then we have developed an overarching corporate approach to things. I had undertaken to give it to that committee in the previous Parliament. We suspended work on that a little bit at the time of the election, as we're required to do, and we're just about ready to talk to the minister about it.
I apologize, but I don't think I'm in a position to tell you a great deal about it, because we haven't had a substantive conversation with the minister. We did take the Auditor General's comment in general and have been working on it. If you ask us the same question in the fall, I think I would be able to give you a fairly concrete answer. I'm sorry I can't do better now.