I can only respond to that based on what the waste experts from the province, our waste management task group, report to me. It falls into a number of different areas, but there is dissatisfaction amongst the technical folks across the country with the range of Statistics Canada data and the granularity of Statistics Canada data.
There are a variety of reasons for that. There are concerns about the lengthy delays between receiving data and getting data. Sometimes two, three, four years intervene between the collection of data to the time it's available, which renders it somewhat problematic. There are no consistent definitions across the country on what constitutes recycling, what constitutes disposal, what constitutes a certain category of waste, what constitutes a particular category within a waste stream. Those are all areas that governments collectively are looking at and trying to address.
That gives you an example of some of the areas where the data itself is the problem.