There are really two aspects that are very important. Our inspectors are critical. You have to give them the full range of authority. You can't micromanage and shouldn't micromanage an inspector in the field. We rely on their training, professionalism, and judgment.
One of the important things in exercising that power is you have to have reasonable cause. This is a test that would apply across the board in looking at all inspection powers. Five or six months ago, the agency tried to capture some of this and lay out some of these things in a service commitment document that applies to our inspection staff and to all of the people we regulate.
There is also another powerful new tool in this legislation. It provides for the creation of a statutory complaints mechanism, which does not exist in statute now. For anyone who is regulated or anyone who feels that an inspector or anyone else in the agency overstepped their bounds or was not reasonable in the use of the powers, it now provides a review and appeal mechanism that can look at the situation quickly, come to a conclusion, and take action if indeed it is founded.
In addition, as is the case now, people would have access to the courts, but this provides a mechanism that should be faster, quicker, and cheaper than trying to go through court.