Mr. Chair, I would just say once again to the committee that when you say “shall”, you are binding it, unlike what we have with PMRA right now. PMRA does not say “shall”, and we would have been in breach of the statutes already, because we went nine months. By saying “should” you are being more definitive. The department doesn't like it because you're being far more definitive on what should be done, but you are still giving flexibility to the committee in not tying its hands if an issue of the day comes up. And that's the real issue here.