Thank you, Chair.
And welcome to our Auditor General and her tremendous team.
I'm both encouraged and occasionally disappointed when reports come in. But of course you're doing your job. There are two things I really like about this. If there is criticism that is deserved, it's delivered. But if there are accolades and/or encouragement and lessons to be learned in best practices, that's also stated.
Generally, out of the nine reports, we have a really positive...for at least seven of the nine, so I think that's tremendously encouraging. But that doesn't, of course, delay the circumstances when we have a dilemma and/or a problem and/or a weakness. We zero in on it as well.
I'll touch on both the helicopter deal and the economic action plan to start with.
On the economic action plan, I'm wondering about a best practice--is it a best practice?--that was used very successfully for the stimulus, and that was a sort of parallel approval process. Treasury Board and cabinet really worked in tandem, at the same time, rather than in a consecutive manner in reducing the timeframe from the six months to the two months, with a tremendous amount of work, of course, by the public service. Now, is this something that we should or could consider as the modus operandi for other departments, other programs, other situations? Or do you think the emergency requirement of really getting this effective stimulus out in a very short order necessitated that action? What are your thoughts as far as going forward with regard to policy is concerned?