The decision to have a government-wide policy on this is, of course, an issue of policy. I don't know why no policy was adopted on that, but certainly, the fact that there is no policy could be one of the elements that would explain why some departments are doing it and some are not doing it. There is actually no requirement now.
We see in the response that there will be several elements. They've indicated that certain elements will be made mandatory. When we have a department, for example Veterans Affairs Canada, where there were no elements of the framework that one would expect, there has to be, not necessarily a policy, but a process in place to ensure that departments are actually considering this.
That is why we go back again to saying the central agencies have to do more than simply train their own people. They have to ensure some process by which they know what is going on within other departments and agencies, whether they are actually putting in place the framework, whether they are doing the analysis one would expect, or if they're not, that there is some rationale behind it, that people understand why it's not being done.