You know what worries me? I remember this distinctly. If my colleagues from city council were here, they would recall this vividly. We had a developer sitting at the table at a committee meeting, and we were advising the developer of certain requirements that he needed to put in place. He got all upset and lost his cool and said, “You know, I've just about had it with the city and all these mamby-pamby rules.” Well, the mamby-pamby rules were the Ontario fire code regulations. And I see your response very similarly, sir.
You're not taking this seriously enough. I understand that you're getting the job done. I'm pleased about that. I hope you have a horse waiting outside your office so you can jump on it and rush to the middle of the scene of the panic so you personally can solve everything. But I have an Auditor General, who knows a hell of a lot more about these things than you or I, telling me that these things are essential. They need to be in place, and you're going on, sir, telling me how unimportant they are, or that they're not as important. I just want to hear you tell me that you agree that these things are essential. You're saying that they're in the middle. That's not good enough.