Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Welcome again to our guests. As always, it's just a complete validation of the office.
It's that mixed bag of things that we like to see, where we're doing something right in government, but it's also clear identification of areas that need improvement, some of them minor tweaking and others a major re-evaluation of how, why, where, and what we do.
Thank you very kindly for coming here today. There's no doubt that after receiving the number of these chapters of concerns, this committee is going have substantial work ahead of it to come forward with recommendations and to follow your guidance on this.
I have a couple of maybe good thoughts and bad thoughts. I won't dwell on the conflict of interest situation, but that's highly problematic, and at some particular point I will. I'm more concerned with that from the one statement you made on it, which is, “We are very concerned knowing all of the circumstances, the department went ahead....”
Well, regardless of what the individuals are doing right or wrong in there, if the department knowingly still proceeded in a particular direction, that's a governmental decision. Quite frankly, I'm hopeful that down the road as we move on to that, we will potentially explore it.
So thank you for identifying that. That clearly is a classic example of some of the things we need improvement in.
Right off the bat, you mentioned you actually saw some good practices by the National Research Council that other departments and agencies could adopt. I think it's important. Identifying our problems is one thing. But also, if there are some positives that can be either duplicated, replicated, and/or whatever....
I'm wondering if you could specifically identify a few of those positive practices. And would they be transportable or transferrable to some and/or all departments to use as a potential template or potential pattern?