Sure.
The act that brought into effect the Canada health and social transfer basically said that the health transfers to provinces have to meet certain conditions that are contained in the Canada Health Act. If not, funding can be affected.
With respect to the social transfers, as I said in my presentation, there is nothing except the fact that a province can't have a minimum residency requirement as a prerequisite for eligibility and social assistance. That means if someone showed up in Nova Scotia tomorrow, they could instantly qualify for social assistance if they meet the eligibility criteria, even though they've just arrived in the province. That's the only current condition. Obviously, there's nothing there with respect to adequacy.
You mentioned the jurisdictional issue. As you know, provinces have certain jurisdictions and the feds have certain jurisdictions. The provinces are responsible for social assistance. The federal government can't swoop in and start designing social assistance programs in each of the provinces. But what they can do is use their spending power, which they've done with the Canada Health Act and our health care program, to effectively tell the provinces, we want to see X, Y, and Z when you establish a social assistance scheme. That's currently what they are not doing.