When we look at that, there was a mistake in the set-up right from the beginning, a system-inherent mistake. There was a corporation created under the CNCA. No powers were given for inside and outside Canada to do something against unauthorized practitioners—something law societies have.
Problems were created, and my belief is that at that time, it may have been because of time. Everybody was looking for a fast solution to have improvements to the previous regulator and forgot to make it a comprehensive solution. Now we have it, and these are the powers inside and outside UFPs. As many asked for, we have government control. They raised the standards—