I think we talked about that in the context of the performance audits I released last week, but in the context of financial audits, it's actually very unusual to find ourselves in a situation where the underlying information is not sufficient for us to be able to provide an opinion on a set of financial statements. On that side of the work we do in the financial audit side, the data is usually managed in such a way that the quality is there for us to be able to express an opinion on a set of financial statements. It is not usually a problem that we have there.
In terms of the performance audits, as we talked about last week, certainly there we see a lot more problems with the way the administrative data is captured. We talked about the problem with addresses at Citizenship Canada and the problem with the information about the preparedness of reserve force soldiers at National Defence. On the administrative side, which is what we tend to look at in our performance audits, there are a significant number of problems with data. On the financial audit side, it's much rarer to have those types of problems, but the one instance where we have it is the reserve force pension.