I can speak to the lump sum for pain and suffering, in fact. Yes, that $360,000 is the benchmark for the courts in Canada for pain and suffering.
There is general agreement—in the policy advisory group, at least, there was almost unanimous agreement—that this figure is adequate for dealing with pain and suffering because it's reflective of what your average Canadian receives for pain and suffering, and my pain and suffering are no more important than your pain and suffering: pain and suffering are pain and suffering.
The way the lump sum top-up was actually implemented—by taking the consumer price index and applying it—resulted in less than half of what people were expecting to receive, so there was a serious problem with managing expectations right up front. We didn't find out about the consumer price index application to the lump sum top-up until literally days before it was announced.