Thank you for the question.
There are a couple of things I should highlight.
Number one, since the investment plan was finalized, the key changes that were made were really to help the small organizations by requiring less documentation. Instead of going to Treasury Board for approval, they could submit their investment plan via a letter to Treasury Board Secretariat pro forma. There are some nuances, depending on the size of the organization. That's one change.
Lots of information sessions and guidance have been given on how to best produce these things. Still a fair comment is whether we have the balance right between large and small. That's something we'll look at as we go through the policy reset that my colleague Roger Scott-Douglas talked about.
We will likely make some additional changes as we reset the policy.
What I will say is that I pulled together a group of chief financial officers about three months ago to talk about the investment planning policy. The first question I put to them was whether they found this useful and did they think that we still needed a policy. The answer was a resounding yes. We had a follow-up conversation and we have the headlines right. We probably have some thinking to do on the details, but grosso modo we think it's working quite well.