Thank you, Mr. Chair.
That leads to exactly the line of questioning that I had intended to get into, and this is the question of accounting practice.
Yes, we all understand that for any given item, you have a book value, and the market value will be determined, I guess, when you put the item up for sale. The market value will be whatever somebody is prepared to pay for it, but on aggregate, across $60 million worth of items, thousands of items, you ought to have a correct or close to a correct number for value. If the value that we are getting at the end sale is the real value, the market value, and the book value is 50% more than what we're selling for, if we're selling for two-thirds of what is on the books, that's a problem.
Does the Auditor General's office have concerns about accounting methods?