As I mentioned, from what we've seen of the court challenges program, often it supports one point of view. Already, now, you see the beginning of different points of view on integrated schools. Obviously we have some support across the political spectrum in Quebec. Some people have mentioned the position you've mentioned, that they feel it might not work. At the minimum, a lot of people felt at some level it should be tried, because Quebec is a unique environment in Canada, where anglophones do recognize French is a public language and a language of business, stronger and more important than in many of the other provinces.
But you can see here how there's going to be divergent points of view and divergent claims to the process. We're saying we don't have confidence in the process based on what we've seen. If all of a sudden someone said, “Yours is not a real challenge because nobody wants integrated schools”, then we would have to raise our own money privately, entirely, and then, of course, those people who support an opposing point of view would get a free ride with the court challenges program.
So we're saying that in instances where you get diametrically opposed cases, there be some kind of mechanism through which the public feels each side was fairly treated.