Mr. Wright, can I go back to some comments you made about public participation? I think our guest from the Salt Institute mentioned it as well.
There are a number of examples of public participation out there. The North American Free Trade Agreement's Commission for Environmental Cooperation has a citizen-initiated process. Our Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development has a citizen-initiated process. There is a myriad of examples in provinces and across American states, and I think even at the federal level in the United States. The last time I looked at most of them, overall citizen-initiated processes of these kind were very few, not for lack of information or ease, or even in some cases for lack of intervenor funding, which is made available for them to initiate an action or a complaint.
Why is that?