Good. Thanks.
I want to move on to the Auditor General's report, page 10. Under “Our Impact”, I appreciate the bullet point that says, “Since we launched our Status Report in 2002, we have reported that departments have made satisfactory progress in more than half of our follow-up audits.” That can also be put the other way: holy smokes, almost half are not complying, which is a more troublesome way to look at it.
Over the last couple of years, we've been dealing with and now have in place, I'm pleased to see—and I was amazed that nothing existed when I got here, not that I led this change, but I was a part of it—the ability to monitor our recommendations, so that we can go back a year and a half later to determine whether there was action on our recommendations, after they have come forward and said they will do everything—“Don't worry; everything will be okay”—and then go off, and nothing happens. We get the attention of departments in a serious way when the Auditor General tables her report; we get response in a serious way when we bring them in and hold a hearing. Outside of these occasions, the culture seems to be that those recommendations aren't that important. I'm just saying that this is the impression that's left: it's not that important; it's something you have to get through rather than address.
Here we are now, having to put systems in place, and we're doing it, and that's good, but still, this concerns our recommendations. Almost half of the Auditor General's recommendations aren't being complied with.
My question is this. What more do we need to do, at the parliamentary level, to change the culture so that these things matter and so that it's no longer acceptable to stickhandle your way through a day or two of tough media attention, and then after that you're into clear sailing?