Yes.
I wanted to start with Janet first, and then I'm going to go to some others.
You have, Janet—maybe I should say councillor, because that would be appropriate—quite a list, actually, of ways that this would hamper the city, in terms of developing its programs, and also, more importantly, not just generally your programs but the acts that you are obliged, as a city, to follow and to respect, and to have proper information.
You listed quite a few of those—and those are clear—with respect to health standards. I'm not going to repeat all of them, but I wanted to ask you two things.
One, you said that there were at least 25 pieces of federal legislation the city is obliged to respect, I suppose, and work with. Could you give us a couple of those and whether or not you think the Government of Canada would have to relax those pieces, given that the city would no longer have that information?
Two, from your perspective, given that Toronto went through a major issue with SARS, we had a major crisis, as you know—this goes to the health part of your presentation—could you briefly tell us how this would impact that kind of preparation, that kind of situation, from the public health perspective?
So there are those two pieces, if you could. I only have seven minutes, I apologize. If you could through those quickly, I can go to the other questions.