One of the things we did before making any decisions is go out and we listen. I was impressed that on the Navigable Waters Protection Act, the Conservative Party, the Liberal Party, the Bloc Québécois, and the NDP did a lot of work on this--the transport committee--and responded unanimously. These changes were all looked at over a year ago, long before the current economic crisis that we now face. So we're coming forward with legislative changes and we're coming forward with regulatory enhancements that again build on what we heard from Liberal governments, from Conservative governments, from Progressive Conservative governments, from NDP governments across the country.
My premier, Dalton McGuinty, said that the discussions on infrastructure were perhaps the most positive, both in the November and January meetings, that he's seen in the first ministers conference. So we've developed an unprecedented consensus for action. I think that's important. We're looking at a variety of areas as well within my own department. With the web of rules that it has built up--and I don't point fingers at any political party--with scandal after scandal after scandal, where people with good intentions came forward and established more red tape, we're doing everything we can to streamline that.
We've also asked the provinces and municipalities to do their part as well, and they're all agreed. I was pleased with that.
I think, though, one of the things that are important is that it requires leadership at the top and a cooperative spirit. I think when I talk to folks in my constituency of Ottawa West--Nepean, what they want to see in this challenging time in the Ontario economy is their federal government and their provincial government working cooperatively together to put aside politics. I think the current relationship, for example, in your province and mine with the provincial government is probably at a high-water mark. Gone are the cheap shots on both sides; gone are the political manoeuvring . There's a real commitment to work together. That leadership comes from the top. It's coming from Premier McGuinty, it's coming from Prime Minister Harper, and we're committed to do that.
One of the areas that I think can delay projects is just political agreement, and we've been working hard, directly. I jumped into this. I met all my provincial counterparts, all the premiers directly on this issue. We've done a lot of work and we're committed to continue that spirit of cooperation. Without that, nothing can work. No matter how many regulatory changes we make, no matter how much money we throw in the system, it's been particularly constructive with Ontario. This is a sea change on both of our parts, and I think that's positive.