Sure. Thank you.
We've made 22 commitments. I commissioned an internal audit as well, and that's under way. That's also giving rise to commitments to address some of the gaps in the processes that existed in the department.
I can group it into a few categories.
One is training and guidance. It needs to be ongoing. I required retraining of executives and managers with delegated authority, and we continue to put out improved guidance.
Quality assurance and controls is our second line of defence, as it were. I don't want to keep finding out about gaps through our audits. That's an expensive way to find out that we don't have coverage and that our documentation isn't in order.
Then there's conflict of interest. I indicated that we've also done some work on that, both on the side of contractors and employees.
Then there's organizational changes. I mentioned something a few times, because it is quite significant in terms of the operations of the department, and this is contracts going through, one by one, to a senior review committee. That's giving rise to a lot of discussions about whether we even need contracts in some cases.
Next is reprioritizing what we need to do.
Then there's bolstering the capacity of our internal procurement team, which has increased by 20%. It's a credit to that team that the attrition rate has decreased to 7% from 35%, so we have a very engaged and knowledgeable team. It's fanned out across the organization to support other divisions and sectors in their procurements.
Then there's improving our information management practices. The policy is quite clear on documents of business value. I don't think there's business value in having 18 emails back and forth versus decision documents that are clear and can be found with all of the other relevant documents, be it in a procurement file or investigation.
Those are the areas we're working across. We're more advanced; we've completed nine of our commitments and should have the rest done in a year. It also speaks to the culture. It's not about new rules and processes. It's about fewer priorities. It's about exposure to where we're going in terms of contracting, where we need contracts, discussions about what we can do internally. It also is happening at the level of the culture of the organization.