On that very front, in a previous meeting, I asked the assistant deputy minister of the department about that number.
I want to read it to you, for your consideration, and I'd like to have your response. I asked the following question to Mr. Gerard McDonald, the ADM responsible:
Why would you have set out to achieve so many more audits and do 25% of what you set out? If you set out to do way more than that, did you not do it based on evidence, based on technical projections, based on need, based on safety?
The answer from Mr. McDonald was,
Yes, and based on our estimation of the risk in the system and what was required to give us a degree of confidence on the safety—
I responded with “Absolutely.” He then said,
—we felt at the time that the original number of audits that had been planned for was probably in excess of what was needed.
I was struck by this. I responded by saying,
It's in excess of what's required for safety for Canadians and safety in the system. Is that what you're saying now?
Mr. McDonald replied,
What we're saying is we adjusted our level of audit based on what we felt was necessary on our part to ensure safety in the system.
I can't square this, nor can Canadians. On the one hand, your team has looked at their projections for audits over three years. I assume you must have concluded that the projection of the number of audits required was perfectly reasonable. Then the senior-most official from the department comes to the committee and says, “Well, in fact, the numbers we contemplated doing over three years are wrong.”
Therefore, as the Auditor General, your number, 26%, is wrong as well, because he is now saying, as a matter of testimony, that was the wrong number targeted.
Do you follow my question here? Can you help us to understand how that can be?