The two quick things are about disclosure.
You don't talk at all about disclosure. I know that I'm not a constitutional lawyer, but I'm married to one and she tells me there's something called the Constitution Act, which has federal and provincial jurisdiction. Anyway, I know that the federal government has jurisdiction over divorce and the provinces do property, so a lot of the disclosure component tends to go into the rules—I remember the rules committee of the Province of Ontario—so you don't see that. But we need something that talks about it, because I can't do a mediation or dispute resolution properly without proper disclosure.
I can't tell you the number of mediations where I start the mediation and the other side says, “I don't have proper disclosure.” I say, “What are you doing here? How can I solve the case if you don't know that the wife has hidden assets in the Bahamas. How am I supposed to settle it?”
My main points, to repeat, are as follows. One, when it comes to family violence, we need a process in the legislation to consider how I'm going to get the information if I am a mediator in that process.
Two, when you're doing the adviser responsibility, it's very important for us to do it not just once, because by the way, we often do our adviser responsibilities so that we fought, we settled and at the very end if someone wants to bother getting a divorce, then we give them the adviser information of the alternative.
The third point, which is a very minor point, is what I just listed to you.
Thank you very much for your time.