Now that you've done that--you didn't word it that way before, so I was waiting for you to do that--what we have here are the elements of a plan, not the plan itself. Again, it goes back to the elements of something that may show up when the plan is developed. If it becomes part of legislation or regulation that does specify spending, then at that time it may require a royal recommendation.
I'll go back to Mr. Godfrey's point about Bill C-288, which did have specifics, or elements, in it that were similar and was ruled by the Speaker of the House not to require a royal recommendation. Therefore, I'm going to follow that precedent, and my ruling is that this does not require royal recommendation and is therefore admissible.