I would agree with what she says, but one thing I would like to add is that any sort of voluntary commitment really hinges on a basic question that I don't think is in CEPA and may be outside the purview of CEPA, and that is that we haven't figured out yet what we want our economy to do.
I'll digress for just a minute. Next year I'm part of an international sailing expedition circumnavigating North America to call attention to climate change. Two of our largest sponsors are private businesses that you would not think would be supportive of the whole science of climate change; that's Wal-Mart corporation and DuPont. I'm convinced that both of those large-scale businesses are making serious attempts to voluntarily change the way they do business, and I look at that as extremely positive.
How that filters down through CEPA into local jurisdictions I don't know, but I know that large corporations can be great teachers when it comes to some of these issues, if there's some clarity on how government wants to allow them to operate.