The labour-management consultation committees have been established in all organizations. I believe one is still in the process of setting it up. I can verify that and get back to you. But my understanding is that they each have one in place.
On the comment about the participation, it was one of the comments the Auditor General picked up from some of the bargaining agents. It's not so much that the departments aren't able to populate and structure these, but that some of the bargaining agents found they were stretched a bit thin to be able to participate in all of these labour-management consultative committees that were established.
So I don't think it was a comment on the fact that the organizations themselves had not set them up. It was more that in the change of this approach or in the establishment of these committees, bargaining agents or representatives were finding it difficult to be able to populate all of them.