Yes, Mr. Chair, there probably is. There are sections of it that are quite long just because of the financial statements, which take up several pages. We do try, at the beginning, to give a bit of a summary of what the report says.
I think the issue—if we think of Mr. Williams's suggestion of a committee—goes deeper than that. To compare it to the private sector, if you own shares in a corporation, you'll get the annual report and all the proxies and all that. I'm not sure that many people actually read those either, but they rely on their broker or someone who's done the research and analysis to give them a short buy-sell-keep summary. One thing that parliamentarians might want to think of is whether you need some sort of analysis capacity as well that will go through all these detailed reports for you and then give you some sort of more summary analysis, because I think we recognize that members of Parliament don't have the time to read these things.