But my point is this. In the immediate aftermath of an accident, the Canadian public would expect quick action, certainly. This would not be a calm day. Folks are going to have to go out and put booms up or seek to start digging up soil, or do something. I don't even know what they do when it comes to the cleanup of a nuclear accident.
Even under a flood in Canada, we have emergency preparedness guidelines to know exactly who does what and who gets to say what. In order to avoid the scenario in which somebody does a bunch of work that they don't get paid for or does work that's improperly done, they run through those scenarios. Do we run through those scenarios, in terms of a nuclear accident, as to who gets to say yes and who gets to say no?