To be clear, sir, the submission I gave to the Senate committee was the same as the one I gave to this committee. It could achieve those three objectives if the nine or ten concerns that I laid out were addressed better.
The truth is because we don't have good data about the number of people who are dying from food-borne pathogens every year, we don't know how this—at some level it seems as if it's a good exercise to merge legislation. It sounds as if it makes things more efficient, but I am concerned about inspectors who are being forced to become jacks of all trades as an example.
I honestly don't know if it's going to lead to better outcomes, and I don't think anybody can know that if we're not monitoring the outcomes.