Thank you, Chair.
Thank you for that, but Mr. Woodworth brings up a good point. I think it would be important, first of all, that you come back once you've finished your analysis of this. I'm always pleased to see you, Commissioner Vaughan, but I say so while wishing that we had a little more meat to discuss and you were a little further along in your discussion of it. I think Mr. Woodworth highlights, and legitimately so, that governments of the past have not always been able to deliver on their visions and on what people had hoped to achieve.
In terms of achievements since 2005, I just wonder if there have been concrete improvements and real changes in what the government has been doing, other than it proposing new plans. In looking at some of the things the government has brought forward with much trumpeting, I think exactly of the changes it has made to environmental assessments. These have purportedly been made to simplify and eliminate red tape and duplication. Is that going to help the federal government become more sustainable in the long run or not?