First of all, I can tell you that I'm answering your questions in good faith. I already answered a question earlier, telling you that the files were not closed. They were transferred to other inspectors, under the SMS system to determine whether there were corrective actions taken by those companies to ensure that the problem would not reoccur. That's what they did.
We have a database of old enforcement cases. In that database, yes, the files were closed. Then it was transferred to other inspectors, under the SMS policy, to determine whether there were corrective measures.
Mr. Julian, I'm in good faith. I've told you twice. I don't know what more to tell you. We did not close them. There is CAD 39 published on the web, which you can view. It has the policy, the procedures, and a bridging document explaining the transition on enforcement.
Everything was open and transparent, and they were not closed. The national audit program was cancelled. That was an administrative constraint. The way we did big audits in the past was to call upon the regions and HQ to work together. We've decided to eliminate that, because it was easier to implement SMS and ensure safety by eliminating this and putting more resources through the transition process.
There were staff instructions given. As I told you, we're in good faith. We're telling you that we have more safety oversight now, through the establishment of SMS, than we had ever before through the old NAP, and the NAP is only for six or seven carriers.
I don't know where you got your facts, but I'm giving you the straight goods, the facts in the proper context, in which you should have gotten them when you got them.