No, you're right. But I can tell you that in a case in Manitoba—and this would be replicated across the board—they've had to go for a special warrant. They now anticipate having to spend $100 million on the H1N1 pandemic, and $6.8 million of that is coming from you, the federal government, and that is based on 60% of the vaccine. So you see that it is a huge cost that the provinces are bearing.
In a normal national emergency, the numbers are reversed. It's usually 90% federal and 10% provincial. In this case, we have 90% provincial and 10% federal. I think that needs to be addressed.
Let just ask you this. In terms of the number of problems that have been identified with the whole rollout of the vaccine and the whole pandemic, including the delay in identifying priority groups, the failure to commit to the three million doses per week when you did, the change in terms of different advice on the adjuvanted and the non-adjuvanted, the concerns among the first nations communities, the failure to support some of those communities, the single-source contract, the public confusion over safety of the vaccine, the rollout difficulties in terms of erratic supply—