These are just a couple of little things--really small--that I've just noticed. You don't even have to comment on them.
We have three presentations in front of us, and only one of them is double-sided. Given that the environment is part of...and it's the Auditor General's presentation that is double-sided. They're in good shape.
But this begs another question. As I was thinking about the first part, I was looking around and thinking about all the bleach we still use in government to make paper white. At some point, there are some really fundamental things that we could do that would make a big difference.
At any rate, I want to turn first to the clip from today's Globe and Mail, with the headline of “Inquiry into Revenue Canada auditors sprung from Mafia probe”. It's a bit of an ongoing story. It speaks to the fact that two employees, I believe, of Revenue Canada who are team leaders, who supervise other investigators, were alleged to have been conducting themselves in an inappropriate way, shall we say, and that the only reason it was found out was that the RCMP were doing a Montreal Mafia investigation, Project Coliseum. They sort of tripped over this as a secondary matter.
Given the fact that we have the Auditor General, we have Treasury Board, we have the Comptroller General, and we have assistants and auditors all over the place, why did it take the RCMP--it's almost like it took the auditors to get Al Capone--to get auditors?