On that point, one of the things we've said is that a warning letter could be a deterrent, but the only way Environment Canada would know whether it was a deterrent was if they were to go back and follow up to see whether or not the warning letter led to the regulated entity coming back into compliance. What we've said is that of 600 warning letters for minor violations, there was no follow-up for 50% of them.
I absolutely agree. The intent was to send signals, but you need to know whether or not those signals worked.