It's a good question. I think when you look at the Great Lakes region, obviously it has a long-standing history of co-operation when it comes to the environment, dating back to 1909 with the Boundary Waters Treaty, the creation of the International Joint Commission, and more recently on the time scale, the creation of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement in the 1970s.
We have, I think, a good benchmark of co-operation, and we have come a long way in terms of how we look at the Great Lakes from an economic standpoint and from an environmental protection sustainability standpoint. There are some good lessons that we can take from that collaboration in this region for how we might want to look at reforming the commission for environmental co-operation, and really trying to look at how we come together as three countries to determine the state of the environment across all three countries and do that in a meaningful way.
I've been in and around this space for a long time—