Thank you, Mr. Chair.
In hearing that argument, I understand and I think that is valid for the very first piece. However, if you don't start, you'll never get the trend. Therefore, if you don't measure it, it often doesn't get done.
I would argue that argument actually makes it more important that we have this amendment accepted, because this will establish a baseline of where we're at, so that, five, 10 or 15 years from now, we can see how effective it is in certain spaces and places, and whether this perhaps needs to be tweaked. If we don't set the baseline of what we're going to consider.... Whether this is successful or not, that review is going to be one that doesn't actually have any metrics as to how to judge success.
I'm going to try to urge all of my colleagues to vote in favour of this, so we can set that benchmark and those guidelines and so we can find those trends. Without this, there is no capacity within the bill, as it's currently written, to have that trend space.