I will give you more details about the public accounts, but I will do so in English, because it is a little technical.
If you think about the financial statements, you have three areas in which you can provide additional disclosure. You have something called subsequent events, which is for something that has happened after year-end but is still important enough to talk about. In years gone by, we've used it to disclose information on sale-leaseback transactions, etc. That's one opportunity.
We do have a note on significant transactions. If there has been a transaction or an event that's big enough to warrant separate discussion and disclosure in the financial statements, it gives the government the latitude to do that. In addition, volume 2 of the Public Accounts of Canada contains a full listing of allocations from central votes to departments. You will see that when the time comes around.
Finally, on top of all of the financial information in the Public Accounts of Canada, there's a section called “Financial Statements Discussion and Analysis”. It's the first section of the public accounts themselves. It often talks about the financial situation of the country, the results achieved, and the economic situation. That would be a good chance at a macro level to discuss that. That goes on top of the departmental performance reports, which you've already flagged.