--the domestic act that brought the requirements for Canada at a domestic level. That case was not permitted to proceed at the Supreme Court. At the point that it was at the Supreme Court, I think our expectation was that it actually was a broader question about the rule of law, the democratic process, and what the role of Parliament was in agreeing to this act that then was not acted upon.
So as for what would be different, Will may have something in addition to this, but in my estimation it would be that, as I commented earlier, I would hope that this environmental bill of rights would require all such acts to have—and someone's going to help me with the terminology—judiciability. That would be a requirement: that these kinds of decisions made by Parliament must be acted upon. I think that's a clear message that's required. I would have been very pleased, in fact, to have had that work done under the mantel of something like the Canadian Environmental Bill of Rights.