The tribunal concept is to replace a more temporary panel approach that we have right now, so that you can gain expertise within the tribunal. It's up; it's running; it's predictable. In addition to that, the AIT needs more teeth. That's one point I really didn't hammer home.
Through this experience with Ontario and Quebec, we hold our breath that they are going to comply because there are not very substantial monetary penalties in place. It's better than it used to be, but it needs to have more teeth.
When an agreement like the AIT is contravened, there has to be compliance and a mechanism to ensure compliance through the courts. We need that permanency. We need that history. We need it to kind of replicate what's happening at the international trade level, because those systems do work. There are repercussions. There are teeth in those agreements. Our internal barriers should be treated exactly the same in our view.
How you get the provinces onside is a good question.