There's room for improvement.
The report on the three water basins indicated that they were moving in the right direction. There were often mechanisms in place for some coordination, but not enough.
We also noticed—and this is perhaps something for a future audit—that despite the co-operation and the coordination, there were still long-standing problems with the actual water quality. As per my focus on outcomes and results and not just on process, if we look at this issue again, or if this committee looks at this issue in the context of the water study that you were debating earlier today, I would propose that you ask for solutions that are going to actually affect the water quality itself, not just the co-operation related to water quality. That focus on outcomes is crucial.
I grew up next to the Great Lakes, and Lake Erie was the closest water body. It's still, in terms of eutrophication, a big problem 50 years later. There's lots of coordination and lots of co-operation, but not enough results. That, of course, includes the U.S. in that factor too.