Again, I think part of what's important about this conversation is that very often parliamentarians don't know that we issue audit opinions on sets of financial statements. In terms of something like the reserve force pension, our audit opinion might be a denial of opinion or something, but it would not be a regular opinion such as, “This set of financial statements has been prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.” Because so many federal organizations get a standard audit opinion on their financial statements, they are able to prepare financial statements that can be audited and are fairly presented, I think it's often taken for granted, but every now and then there are some that either are not able to meet their authority, statutory deadline for example, or don't have the information that's needed to be able to produce a set of financial statements that can be audited.
I think that those are very much things that parliamentarians should be alert to. This is sort of right now the one way that we have to let people know about that. If we produced a summary report about our work, that might put a little bit more light on it. Again, I think what it very much comes down to is that all we can do is provide the information and say, “This is what the situation is.” Now, there's nothing else that we can do in those instances.