Well, I guess I would say that the timelines are an expression of political will and that political will will flow from those timelines, and so will the resources. The timelines we've proposed assume that the government will put more resources into the assessment and management processes. You could have shorter timelines than the ones we've proposed, but that would require more resources for Environment Canada and Health Canada to do the job. I think, again, that the history of this and other environmental statutes shows that if there's a requirement there, the government is up to the task of meeting that legal timeline. But it is a question of resources.
This notion of political will I don't see as a simple..... I make a distinction between political will and political whim. If we're talking about political will, that has to flow from the act. If we don't have a timeline, then we're relying on political whim. Maybe that will be there and maybe it won't, and maybe it will change over time. But if we actually want to get the job done, there has to be, I think, a legal requirement to do it.