To recap, your question was on how we know the departments will be efficient in their service delivery. From our perspective, under the current regime, there aren't necessarily great incentives to be efficient because it's very difficult for departments to raise the fees. From our perspective, having all fees under the service fees act is actually an improvement. By having the CPI, it at least means that the current split between the private benefit and the public benefit remains the same. One of the other things to consider is in most cases, the folks who are consuming the services are not paying 100% of the costs. In other words, in terms of inefficiency, departments still retain a fair amount of departmental appropriations in the game in terms of what they're going to be subsidizing.
My final comment is in terms of how we make sure that there are incentives for efficiency. There is the improved visibility that's contained in the legislation in terms of having the reports tabled on an annual basis, which lay out the costs as well as the fees collected. Parliamentarians and Canadians can see how that gap is either growing or staying the same along with any other service fee improvements.