Thanks for the question. I'll take one step backwards so you can see how this evolved.
When the original legislation was being negotiated, the aboriginal working group had a very firm position that there would be COSEWIC, which would be the scientific side, and there would be an ATK committee, which would be absolutely equal and parallel. We butted heads over that. I'm sure that my friends from Walpole Island remember that. Dean Jacobs was there. We spent a lot of time fighting over this. Finally, the aboriginal organizations compromised and agreed to an ATK subcommittee within COSEWIC.
So working out exactly how it works within COSEWIC has taken some time.
The important point I was trying to raise in my opening remarks is that this is only in connection with the assessment process. The big gap in SARA is on the recovery side. We want to see more ATK being used on the recovery side.