I'd like to interject, because you're right, you've got them around the table. It's been very successful and very well done. We applaud that. B.C. and Alberta have come to an agreement for labour mobility between the two provinces. We applaud that.
Our provincial government in Saskatchewan should be part of it. They have refused. So it seems that when we get the professions on board, then we lose the provincial body, which wants to sit back and watch this. Their main complaint or main problem with that was they wanted to see if it was good for the public good. So as federal representatives here today, we know you can see how difficult it is, because when you get the professions, you don't get your provincial governments; when you get the provincial governments, you don't seem to have the professions. But across the country, the bigger issue is the professions. You might have done this well in B.C. and Alberta—and you have.
Perhaps we'll look at some of the problems in other provinces, which have been talked about, and maybe this isn't as big a problem as we think, but it certainly is when it comes to a referral agency for credentials.