First of all, I think you have to have political will. So it involves the provinces. It involves the feds, because they'll have statistical data. You can't do it without the academy, because the academics are the ones who are going to do the research. Institutions like the Law Society, which probably wouldn't have a significant amount of data, can actually provide a significant facilitating role, because we can bring people together if people wish to come together.
I think it also requires some real discussion about who keeps the data. Is it kept by the government? Is it off-government? Is it kept by some institution that isn't going to appear to be manipulated? Long term, you're trying to provide evidence-based research for you, the policy-makers, but you're also trying to provide evidence-based research for the academics—not me, but the Professor-Bala types.
No disrespect, Nick, but a young Professor Bala comes in and says he wants to change the family law system and it's going to take him 25 years to get the policy-makers onside. Well, they need the data, and they need to be able to analyze it and provide back to you policy-makers that this is what's in the best interests of Canadians. If you don't provide the fertile ground for the statistics in what we have, then it's a problem. That has been a comment we heard, and I jumped on with what Professor Bala said, and what you said, which we heard most recently in our report. So I think it's all of those things.
We are trying to see, in the Ontario context, about bringing those things together. You guys play in a much bigger sandbox on the federal side, and we're trying to do that on the provincial side. But you know what? Some federal initiative, some federal leadership in this area, would probably benefit everybody.