You know what, since the panel thing has come along, as people have said, once it's done and they tell you it's done, it doesn't matter--it's over. So you just have to get along, because that's the way it is. But as soon as there's an expectation or there's blood in the water that something can change if they just turn ignorant and start jumping up and down and screaming bloody murder, it gets to be in a really bad way.
An example would be what happened at the advisory meeting this spring. This spring the word was that the issue was over. The minister sent people to talk to the temporary fleet, the aboriginal fleet, and the permanent, traditional fleet. They came back with a decision and said the issue was dead. At the advisory meeting, people were unhappy, but it was probably the easiest advisory meeting that I had been to in 15 years. So externally things are good, but as soon as the opportunity to gain something comes out of it and people think they can get something by acting in a particular way, it just creates animosity and makes bad friends of everybody.