Good.
I was checking last night, and the last time there was a Miscellaneous Statute Law Amendment Act was in 2001. That's a process whereby all these little technical amendments can be bundled together by the justice department from all kinds of statutes.
Back in 2001 I think there were some 65 separate technical amendments made to all manner of statutes in this one statute. It's non-controversial. You put them all in one bill and you ship them off to the justice committee. They get passed. If there are any problems, they get yanked from the bill.
So I'm curious why that process wouldn't have been used by the finance department to accomplish at least a few hundred, just knock off the first 100 or 200 of these technical amendments. Wasn't it possible to do that? Why wasn't it done? The process already exists. We're not reinventing the wheel here, we're just.... Could somebody answer that?