Yes. Every witness we've heard who has come forward on SARA has said that SARA is somehow flawed or not doing the right things the right way. However, what I'm sensing from you on the permitting and on the need to move to multi-species is that SARA goes too far, whereas every other science-based group, from SRAC to COSEWIC to some of the other stakeholders, have said that SARA is not being implemented enough, that there are too many concerns about socio-economic impacts getting in the way of the work of actually protecting species and ecosystems that those species live in.
I'm having a little bit of difficulty connecting the fact that SARA sets out to say we protect the species first and foremost, and we fly resources into that and make things happen that way, with what I'm getting from CAPP in particular, which is, well, listen, it's going to cost too much, it's too slow to implement, it's too difficult to implement, we should be more responsible for this, getting away from what the science is recommending, what the scientists are recommending as being desperately needed, regardless of socio-economic considerations.