Okay.
Basically, the problem is that in the meantime the pulp and paper company has discovered a way to wash the wood chips to get the salt out of the wood chips. That is the pollution prevention that we were looking for. But there is no way to go back and get the Canada-wide standard to kick in again, because the process is over. B.C. has folded up its tent and gone home, and we can't find anyone in the federal government to act on this without going to the environment commissioner and laying a complaint or something. On top of this, we found new ways of monitoring for that dioxin, and although the provincial government is interested, the federal government isn't interested.
So this is the frustration. It's that lack of clear lines of responsibility and accountability because of the way the federal and provincial governments pass things back and forth to each other. I think that's at the root of why CEPA is not effective in terms of its toxic control issues.
Thank you. I'll leave it at that.