—because it's a package.
I would go back to two things. One would be the planning phase. Reflecting on what Mr. Sopuck said about the regulatory environment now being fraught, I think one of the intentions of CEAA 2012 was to shut the public out of environmental decision-making. We're in this boat now where we have protests and lawsuits because the public don't feel like they have a forum in which to meaningfully engage and have their concerns heard. The more you can do in the assessment-planning phase, the more you can get the relevant jurisdictions—indigenous peoples, the public—to sit around the table together and design the process to ensure that all the right things are being considered and that participation occurs in a meaningful way and collaboration agreements are entered into, the more easily you will get to decisions that work for everybody.