That's an excellent point. We've raised that, actually, in several of the audits we've done over the years. In the federal government there are what is known as senior financial officers in the departments, and we were very concerned. I think our first audit was about four years ago when we raised the issue that there were very few senior financial officers who had what we would consider financial expertise. We looked for either some accounting designation, an MBA--there were very, very few. I think actually at the ADM level there were only two in all of the federal government. Even in any large private sector corporation, there would be more than two in an accounting shop.
The Comptroller General position has been created since that report, and we have noted an increase. This has been a focus, and the government has worked very hard to try to increase that, so there has been improvement in that area. There are 16 of 22 senior financial officers who have a professional accounting designation, so there has been, I would say, very good improvement in that area, and the Comptroller General does now play a role in the hiring of those people. So that is an area where there has been improvement, but there are still overall--and I think the Comptroller General would agree--not enough people with financial expertise, particularly when the government has announced that it wants to move to auditable financial statements in departments. It's going to require more expertise and more capacity.