I'll try to answer that.
Let me be clear that we don't have a mandate to come to you and say this part of the act is broken, or you should recommend fixing this part of the act or that part of the act. We can't do that. You've heard from witnesses. I do think, however, that we try to articulate some basic themes, principles, goals, directions that we share and most of the witnesses who appeared before you share. We believe that our job is to implement the act in those directions.
There are some basic policy choices that have been made about the direction in which we will push the implementation of the act. We're still working in that direction.
You've heard from many witnesses, and I think we've identified areas where we've bumped up against the limits of the legislation. They have to do with the prescriptive nature of the legislation that requires specific steps to be taken for every species that's listed, regardless of the nature of the threat, regardless of whether that species could be addressed better through an ecosystem approach, or through an approach that deals with a group of species that may in some cases require delaying action on that species so that we can take action on a group of species.
You've also heard about limits that we've bumped up against in terms of the objective of being able to work with partners, while also providing the kind of long-term certainty some commercial activities need in order to be willing to make commercial investments, and also to engage in best management practices on the land that may benefit more than just an individual listed species, but where the act itself only allows us, for example, to provide a three-year permit. I think we've identified there are both thematic limits and specific limits in the act.
In terms of our advice about what to change and what not to change, I apologize, but we can't go that far.