Given that I, like Mr. Lee and Mr. Murphy, have sat on the committee for the scrutiny of regulations, and that I'm now again on scrutiny of the regulations, I do have a very lively interest in the issue of regulations and the authority upon which to adopt regulations. I am cognizant of the fact that there are a number of pieces of legislation that do have that catch-all phrase. Therefore, I would like you to give us some concrete examples of legislation--for instance, you talked about the fisheries and the environment--that has the catch-all phrase that the Governor in Council may make regulations generally for carrying out the purposes and provisions of this act. Do you have examples of using that Governor in Council catch-all phrase to make a regulation that went through scrutiny and was found to come within the scope of the law and the authority of the law, etc., and wasn't ultra vires?
Do you have an example? That's our concern: where has it actually been used, and been used correctly, and not been found to be beyond the bounds or the scope of the enabling legislation, la loi habilitante? Do you have an example?