Absolutely, and my answer will apply to every contract we take on—or any engagement, as we call them.
To start any process, we run checks on the entity itself—we call it an “engaging party”. In this case the engaging end party was the CBSA. We also have to run KYC—know your customer or know your client—types of checks on any other intermediary that would be involved. In this case it was GC Strategies, so both are listed in what's called a “client acceptance process”. In that process they vet both the entities individually and then the engagement as a whole in consideration of the results of the entity process, if you follow me so far. That is a process that involves a series of questions that have to be answered, including the nature of the work, whether or not we audit the individual or the companies—obviously, that would be a red flag for our firm—and other factors. I don't know all the questions off the top of my head, but there are a number of questions, and as I mentioned, it goes through.... Every public sector engagement has a mandatory three partners on it: first, a lead delivery partner; second, a quality control partner; and third, a client acceptance partner—all vetting that the information has been filled out appropriately.