That's “us” as the Office of the Auditor General. The money went back into our budget. Doing the audit of the International Labour Organization essentially didn't affect our budget.
Our mandate for that audit has now terminated, but we have recently started up a mandate as the auditor of Interpol, doing the audit of their financial statements. Again, they are paying the Office of the Auditor General of Canada for that. That money, again, will go into our budget and it doesn't have an effect on our budget.
We feel that we should be involved in those types of international audits as a regular part of our business, particularly in terms of the UN organizations. Interpol is not a UN organization. At all times, we try to make sure that we are involved with at least one UN organization, whenever UN organizations put out a request for proposals on audits, but again on a cost-recovery basis. That's something we try to pursue in a way that whatever we charge those organizations gets paid to us. Essentially it becomes revenue to us for the work that we do.
Just so that the committee is aware, in addition to that, we do other international work. We participate in various committees that look at audit issues that all legislative audit offices around the world are dealing with.
We work through a program funded by Global Affairs Canada and managed by the CCAF whereby we bring performance auditors from other countries over to work with our performance auditors. In fact, sometimes they will come over and be housed or they will work with a provincial auditor general office, but we always have two to four members within our office who come from audit offices of other countries, usually African countries such as Tanzania, Ghana, and Cameroon, but also Vietnam. They will come over and work with us for nine months. Those auditors then go back and take with them what they have learned to help the performance audit practices in their countries. That's another piece of work we do on the international front, through a program funded by Global Affairs Canada.
In terms of CCOLA, that's the community of all legislative audit offices across Canada, being the provincial auditor general offices and ourselves. On that front, we run a secretariat for that group, which keeps everything organized for us as a committee. We do have an agreement with provincial audit offices, because some of them don't have a lot of capacity. For example, the Office of the Auditor General of Prince Edward Island has maybe 17 to 20 people, so we help them through methodology or other advice, or legal support, that type of thing. We have agreements with the other legislative audit offices. They will pay us for that, which again is money that will go into our budget.
Beyond those things, though, there might be other small items that we end up charging for that just go back into the consolidated revenue fund and don't come into our office's budget.