Okay. I think that's as close to a “yes” as I'm likely to get. I'll take that.
We heard Minister Champagne refer to the incident and compare it to an airline incident. Airlines, as you know, like your industry, are oligopolies. They're tightly regulated and they are essential for Canadians. In that setting, as my colleague Brian Masse referenced earlier, if something like this were to happen, it wouldn't be that the company would say, of its own volition, that it's going to provide two days' or five days' or seven days' compensation. There would be obligations for a certain compensation.
Do you think there ought to be a regulatory framework and legal framework, and that it shouldn't be up to you to decide what to compensate Canadians, but up to the law?