Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I think we have to be careful about the report we received this morning from the Auditor General. In my opinion, reading the report 25 times is not going to give us any more information. The only way to obtain more information is to ask witnesses to appear.
Ms. Faille made that very point clear. The information we received from the Auditor General this morning is extremely relevant and important. I think it will have to be made public, which is something that cannot happen now. No name is mentioned in any given chapter because no one has been identified and it will not be possible to know the details of each case.
To my knowledge, Mr. Chairman—correct me if I'm wrong—information contained in the report is confidential. The Auditor General has done her job and all of this is currently being investigated. Comments and information have been provided by certain individuals, for the most part, government employees.
No names will be disclosed and we will be unable to obtain any details. On the other hand, were that to happen, we would basically be doing something that is contrary to the whole idea of having a Public Sector Integrity Commissioner. The commissioner is there to provide protection. Yet we can see that system failed and that the Office of the Public Service Integrity Commissioner has not served the Canadian public well. Public servants' trust in this system has been destroyed.
We are not talking about 2,000 pages. If you take away the beginning, what's left represents about seven or eight pages. So, let's not go overboard. It is possible the Auditor General could appear on Tuesday and provide some explanations and answer our questions.
I can assure you, Mr. Chairman, that there will certainly be enough questions to fill two hours—no problem there.