With respect, Parliament is relying on you to be the experts. Surely, if it's leadership, you have to be able to tell them they're up to par or they're not. I appreciate that you have an ongoing exercise of reviewing their plans.
If you feel it's fine, I wouldn't mind if the next time the Auditor General did her tour, you could show her that you have a chart that shows above the line and below the line. I'm sure she'd look at that.
Can I ask you another question? Because of perhaps our lack of awareness of the organic nature of these plans and protocols, because there aren't a lot of them—I haven't seen one, and the Auditor General may still be looking for some--for purposes of advising or notifying, is there any protocol in existence between the Government of Canada and all its departments or its partner agencies across the country in relation to, for example, a weather event or an earthquake event or a terrorism threat?
What triggers or what arrangements exist to allow the federal government, with all of its resources, to notify an agency that there's a problem in the pipeline, whether it's the weather, or the earthquake about to happen or a terrorism threat? Can you tell me that?