Thank you, Chair.
Thanks to all of you for being here today. It's been very helpful.
Ms. Platt, just to follow up on what you were saying in terms of the commissioner being given the appropriate tools in that case, one of them, as you suggested, was the order-making power. There has been some concern expressed that when you give the commissioner order-making power, things end up in court anyway. Have you seen any evidence in other jurisdictions where the order-making power exists that it also involves a lot of cases ending up in court anyway, clogging the courts or putting a burden on them?