The discipline process can only be as good as the people administering it. You will need people who are tough enough to say “You're out” to somebody, whom I'd call a bad apple, if they need to revoke a licence or impose a penalty. So far, from what I've seen, the people who have been running it are willing to do that. They're willing to be tough but they keep getting taken to court because they have no legal authority.
I think you're going to see for the first time that the end-user can be much more effectively protected, because there is the legal authority in the act. Let's say I'm a lawyer representing the ICCRC and I get dragged into Federal Court. If the judge asks me for my authority to do that, I can point to the act and say, “It's right here.” Until now, they have not been able to do that.
So I think they can shut down the appeals, they can shut down the delays and they have, for the first time, the legal authority to actually discipline people with finality and clarity. That's important.