No, not a bit. We haven't questioned that. The numbers speak for themselves: there were 600 warning letters in a year. We didn't question whether or not those warning letters were appropriate. What we said is that there is a requirement to do a follow-up, which is the policy of Environment Canada. If you issue a warning letter, did the warning letter lead, as the honourable member correctly says, to the past violation being corrected? If you don't follow up, you don't know.
We didn't question in any way whether those letters were appropriate.