I'd like to thank the Auditor General and his team very much for being with us here today. Attending these sessions and seeing the kind of work that the Auditor General's office is doing and trying to suss out what priorities we as parliamentarians should have is quickly becoming one of the highlights of my parliamentary career. I've spoken about this before, and maybe it's just on my own, but when I look at the reports that are before us, issues of security and safety are the priority filters that I look through first. Next are health and access to health services, and then of course there is the money question. In that regard, report number four, on the mental health support for members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, is certainly important to me.
There's one thing we see, and we're now understanding more about how the audit reports look. In the “about the audit” section on page 29 of the report, there's a comment there that I would like the Auditor General or Ms. Butler to address. It has to do with the members of management not agreeing with the statistical collection methods here. I can find it directly if you don't have it. From my understanding, it's something fairly unusual to have.