It's actually a very appropriate question.
The nuclear medicine community used to have a seat at the table with the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. We did have a medical advisory committee there. That was disbanded when the new administration controlling the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission came in. So we were no longer at the table. We were no longer involved in the decision-making process, which directly impacts our patients' well-being. We were working in an atmosphere of darkness, as I call it. I think this is a prime example of what happens when physicians are not involved in the decision-making process.
I do not know why that advisory committee was disbanded. One of our recommendations is that this should be reinstated, so we have those lines of communications, so that the physicians and the patients we represent, because we are the advocates of patient care, will be able to know at an earlier timeframe and be able to bring to the federal government, through the regulatory agencies, the impact this will have. We believe that was a breakdown, with our not being at the table.