To follow up on your point, you mentioned credit cards, and of course the interest side of it for consumers was under the finance department. However, in the last Parliament we had a study on interchange and the interchange rates, and that fell to the industry department. There are many examples we could cite of how we have all of this consumer protection happening out there but there's no way for the consumer to actually go to a website and find information about toxic toys. They'd have to figure out that was under Health Canada.
If you're looking at what other places, such as the United States and Australia, are doing—and we can rhyme off what the other countries are doing—they have specific consumer protection policy all kind of under one roof.
I'd like your opinion. Is this something the Office of Consumer Affairs would be interested in taking on down the road?