The point is very valid and I've spoken to lots of people in the provinces. It's too strong to say they're perverse in centres, because they're trying to do good, but they're working and establishing their careers and their whole process is invested in a provincial program. Suddenly taking that away and replacing it with a single national payer who pays all the pharmacists in their province directly from a national payment commission or insurance commission for this purpose is really a very big challenge because they're invested in it.
There is no easy answer to that. There is little doubt that the public good is going to be served by it, that their provincial electorates are going to benefit from it, but the negotiation that takes place around it is going to be difficult.
As I've said, I think it's almost like a big infrastructure undertaking. We're going to build something really big, and one day it's going to be open and that will be the day that it starts and everybody has to be committed to that day, that it really is going to happen and we're really going to make it work. It's a very big idea to take on. There's no easy answer.