Certainly. To clarify, on the database we've committed to implementing, we're working on that immediately to make sure that we can find all the documents and they can be tracked. That's our interim solution.
In terms of our longer-term approach, immediately, we've already started working on essentially taking all of these disparate legacy systems that don't talk to one another, and we're going to be building a new way of managing grants and contributions. On one hand, it's an IM/IT solution, so it's a technological solution, but it's really looking at how we operate.
It's going to look at how we manage data—so that's data collection—but then also the analytics around that. It's going to link to our finances. Currently, we don't have a way to get the systems to speak to one another. It's then going to track our results. It's taking bits of information and bits of ways to work that we're doing in a variety of different ways and that we can now cobble together. However, as the report has shown, it takes us time and it's not straightforward.
Very importantly, we are working very closely with our partners, including our Canadian partners. They are involved with us in this process to make sure that it's a system that works not just for us, as Global Affairs Canada and as the Government of Canada, but also for them, because they are the front line in delivering these projects on our behalf.