There are a couple of things related to that.
In some cases, you know, regional approaches work. In the case of clean drinking water, it's pretty technical on the ground, right? You can have all the regional bodies you want that either work through regulations or do inspections. The most important part is that the capacity is on the ground. When we see regional approaches around supporting communities, there are inspections for houses or engineering services. I'm not sure that a regional technical body would be able to support the technical operation of water facilities in a community. If there is a regulatory body that would support them, I would say yes.
At the end of the day, the resources are needed to operate the facilities. A regulation in the technical aspect is one approach. I wouldn't say it's impossible, but you really have to think about that one. We need trained and qualified water operators that have the resources to do their jobs, and a regional body is not necessarily going to do that for them.