Thank you, all, for being here. It's been a very interesting morning.
I'm going to follow up on some of the things that Ms. Sinclair-Desgagné was talking about with regard to the CEBA loan program.
It seems, first of all, that we have an unusual situation where the federal government handed this off to a Crown corporation to implement instead of some federal department, which could have contracted this out directly. It seems that there would have been more oversight if that had been the case.
Then EDC said it didn't have the capacity either, so it contracted out to Accenture. Then it asked Accenture to write the contract, basically, because we apparently didn't have time to write a proper contract. It seems to be a cascading series of responsibility being handing off. I think that's been covered, and will be covered in the future as well.
We have over $8 billion that still has to be recovered, or is outstanding, I guess you could say. I think you mentioned that $100 million of that is written off completely, and there's something like $1 billion that is very questionable.
I remember my time as the small business critic, when I'd be talking to the Canadian Federation of Independent Business. It wanted a one-year extension for the CEBA loan repayment. There was a one-year extension. Then it asked for a second one because companies still were recovering. That wasn't granted. However, even with that extension, you say that there was no clear plan for how this money was going to be recovered.
It seems now that one of the real problems with Accenture is that, with the proprietary information and with the banks dealing with most of these loans, it's very difficult for the federal government to figure out how those loans are doing, how many are coming in and what the whole situation is. I just want to see if you could expand on that.