--and there's the Canadian Bar Association for lawyers. Neither of those regulates doctors or lawyers. Those are national organizations. They have provincial chapters, but they're national organizations. They don't control qualifications for acceptance or accreditation in law or medicine.
There is the College of Physicians and Surgeons or some institute like that at the provincial level that regulates doctors, and there is the law society or some institute like that that regulates lawyers. These are created under the legislation of the provincial legislative assembly and authorized to play that role. While these associations may be good for representing, broadly speaking, the professional and economic interests of their members in dealing with the federal government or in dealing with provincial governments, they don't have any direct role to play in the accreditation issue. But certainly they may well be influential players in trying to bring the provinces to adopting a common standard across the country, if that was the role they chose to play.