That's fair enough. The statute does not impose any timeline on the assessment process itself.
As to your question of resources, notwithstanding the very specific guidance, I don't think it's my place to comment on the adequacy of resources. I will reiterate a point that both Mr. Glover and I have made in previous testimony, and that is that the speed at which we can work--we, meaning the departments collectively--and the speed at which we can address the volume of activity required to address these 4,000 substances will depend in part on the resources made available to us. It will also depend on what lessons we've learned from the categorization exercise, what strategies we adopt, the kind of collaboration we are able to attain from industry and, as Mr. Lloyd emphasized, from other countries.
The resources made available will have an impact on the speed at which we're able to work.