Fair enough.
I want to move to Mr. Maker.
One of the things I worked on before was microbeads. Banning microbeads was supported by the industry and by Environmental Defence. We got them together and we got 90% agreement on banning microbeads. There were then, at that time, a number of different players that wanted to get to better practices, but they were being undercut, again, by some bad actors in the process.
In the complaints that you get and the ones you're able to resolve, do you have a couple of bad actors? Is it universal in terms of the problems that you deal with, or is it disproportionate to a couple of organizations in particular? Give us a little snapshot of what you get there, because if we were able to get the industry on board as well—because this is to be a helpful process for everybody, at the end of the day, in consumer accountability—it would be far stronger.
That's where we ended up. We ended up with the union of the environmental people and the chemical producers and the plastics association, and we got unanimous conjecture in the House of Commons and finally a vote that was lived up to.
What are you getting, and how is it reflective of the broader industry?