With reference to this particular program, my understanding is that it's an attempt by the federal government to, as it were, facilitate the process: to help the provinces and territories find common ground regarding what accreditation you need to be a doctor or a mechanic, or whatever the area or the field might be.
What more can the feds do than play maître d' to an ongoing discussion about this? I suppose in some areas—and, again, government officials can more capably address these questions for you—they could try to establish standards, and they could even establish their own accreditation system. They could say they recognize this fellow to be suitably qualified as an engineer, let's say, but they can't force the provincial governments to accept that. If the provincial regulatory agency set up by the provincial government doesn't find the person to have the appropriate qualifications, that's the end of the matter.
So if the federal government, for some reason or other, thought it might be helpful if they were to set up their own accreditation regime and make judgments and assessments and give certificates of one kind or another along those lines, if that would help, they might do that, I suppose, but they can't impose those accreditations on the provinces, and they can't, by virtue of those accreditations, in my view, give the individual the ability to carry on the practice of an engineer or a doctor in a province. The individual has to get provincial regulatory approval.