As I say, through the consolidated work, all of government is audited today. The policy has said that we're not going to require a blanket drilling down so that all departments would be audited.
By the way, that's all departments, not the largest 22. It would be all. The original statement in 2004 concerned all departments. So in fact it's not, as Mr. Wiersema has referred to, the cost of auditing the largest 22. If we were to actually pursue that earlier direction in its entirety, we would be going down to the smallest of the small departments: all means all.
So in opposition to that idea, we said, no, it makes more sense to be selective. Let's go where we think there are risks, where we think there are particular areas of interest; in the end, that will be far more cost-effective than chasing low-dollar-value departments that maybe are not particularly risky, and this will be a far better use of taxpayers' money to be able to apply that sort of risk lens and be selective.