It would depend on the various programs, or whatever the programs were. For example, if it were an infrastructure program, it would say who could do those particular projects. That would be the first step.
Once those program terms and conditions are satisfied, the next step is for the chief financial officers and audit executives in every department to ensure they have put in place review mechanisms and to ensure that the documentation is processed, so that people are actually signing off and putting in place the right documentation for all of the decisions made.
Vote 35 was really to bridge a time gap between April 1 and the end of June. So the chief financial officers would look at their cash requirements and then have to sign off on a statement saying they had a cash requirement for that period. They would then submit that to the Treasury Board. That would also require full approval by the Treasury Board cabinet committee, and it would go through our normal vetting process; we would have analysts look at it and so forth.