That's encouraging.
I really appreciate all the testimony that we've heard, even before I joined the committee, about equity and about environmental justice, particularly for vulnerable populations. When we did the review of emissions from electricity, mostly coal-fired power in Alberta, what the government agreed to do is adopt what I proposed, which is a hot-spots protocol. You are probably aware that in the U.S. they also adopted a hot-spots protocol for coal-fired power. That mechanism is put forward when you have a situation where you have a consolidated source of pollution, such as coal-fired power, oil sands, petrochemical, and so forth. Do you think there is a way the legislation could also incorporate that?
In the Alberta model, there are a number of trigger points. One is when you've got repeated non-compliance, or there's new science that becomes available, and it would trigger a review, including the impact to the community. I wonder if both of you could speak to a variety of options we could use to make sure that vulnerable populations are protected under the act.