Perhaps just to clarify, the interim commission is looking at mid- to longer-term investments in terms of infrastructure and so on in the country as part of supporting the Haitian government's long-term development plan. As a humanitarian organization dealing with the more short-term and some of the medium-term needs, we coordinate first and foremost with the humanitarian sector, which is coordinated essentially by the UN system, the cluster system, which I'm sure you've heard a bit about.
In terms of the short-term emergency needs we're dealing with, be it in shelter or health or water and sanitation, there is another mechanism in which that coordination takes place, which has actually been quite effective. I would say shelter is the most effective of all and that we've been able to share information, get a full picture from the other actors, and move forward the work that we want to get done—within what is possible in the context of Haiti.
The commission's effectiveness or ineffectiveness has not been an impediment to our getting on with our emergency humanitarian assistance.