I would agree absolutely, sir, that there has been progress. I hope I was very clear. There has been a lot of progress on this file since 2005. A national inventory didn't exist then. The procedures to classify didn't exist. The first steps to actually manage them didn't exist. Those have all been put in place, and 9,000 sites have been closed. Closed doesn't mean cleared, or claimed, or remediated, but they've been assessed and found to pose no immediate risk.
In terms of leaving a legacy, I think the one example from the Giant Mine is something that is going to have to be managed for generations. Faro Mine's the same thing. Port Hope's the same thing. So some of these sites, they weren't generated by the federal government, but because the operators went bankrupt.
This is a legacy that's going to be borne by generations in the future.