That is doable today, though, and you can't refute that. When regulators and administrators today have the right to delete unnecessary regulations, why isn't that done? That's the question that should be asked. Don't simply say that for every regulation we're going to create, you must figure out and find one that we're going to delete. There's nowhere in the legislation where it says exactly how that's going to be done, except it points out that it's going to be done through a report at the end of the year: no consultation whatsoever with anybody. How is that going to be done?
Minister Raitt just last week introduced a new regulation around certification of railways. Who, then, is going to determine which regulation we should delete? How is that going to be done? There is nothing in the legislation around consultation, and that should be of grave concern to Canadians.
It's not the fact that we like red tape. We are very concerned, though, that when you try to reduce red tape, you reduce greatly the health and safety of Canadians and of our environment we live in. That's what we're concerned about.