First of all, Mr. Chairman, it is important to give a context in terms of management and the management controls both departments have.
When you look back a number of years, even 10 years back, and look at the management systems of government departments, the number of controls and risk management tools we have at our disposal now as managers is quite astounding. I can speak to the actions that we have taken since I have come on board.
In both Infrastructure Canada and Transport Canada we have increased the internal audit capacity. We have established our external audit committee, which is chaired by an external member. All members are from outside government. We have already briefed them concerning all our operations and all our activities. We have shared all our risks, and they are going to be very much part of the activities we will go through over the years to come.
As well, I don't know if members are aware, but Treasury Board Secretariat does assess the departments' management performance. We do get report cards. As deputy ministers, part of our performance depends on how well our departments are being managed.
I must say that Transport Canada, in particular, has been at the top of its class in a lot of management areas, and Infrastructure Canada, for a seven-year-old department, has come a long way in terms of having the right systems and structures. As public servants we are proud of the work we have done, and we feel that we had a role to play in this very important project, especially on the economic action plan.
The workload issues were more on the Infrastructure Canada side; Transport Canada is a big department and it has the capacity.
I'll just leave it there.