Dealing with the list issue first, this has been a big issue every time there's been a discussion about the act. It was a big issue during the original development of the act and the last review. Essentially, it's about how you deal with new types of projects that come along. The “all-in unless excluded” approach is the safer approach. It's the approach that says the kinds of projects we're forgetting about, that may come along after we develop this list, should be in until they've come to the attention of regulators, and then they can look at whether they should be excluded. I think this process has worked very well.
If you now move to a list, then you have to ask yourself how you ensure that important projects that should be subject to an environmental assessment don't fall through the cracks, either because we didn't think about them or because they came along afterwards. In my presentation I gave you a list of five or six different types of projects that have come along in Nova Scotia in the last decade. If someone had developed a list 10 years ago, none of those would have been on it.
That's on the list; what was the other?