There was nothing specific on the table, other than good intentions. I think what would have happened in that world, had you been re-elected in 2006, is that the minister and the department would have been asked to go and talk to provinces about implementation. The implementation route would have been precisely the one we've been following for the last few years, which is to sit down with the Government of Saskatchewan and the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations and work out what's appropriate in that jurisdiction. We're looking at docking with provincial services, which are different across the country, and meeting comparability with provincial norms, which are different across the country. The education curriculum in Newfoundland is not the same as the education curriculum in Quebec.
We would have been going down a route of tripartite arrangements, which is the route we're looking at now. I think what I've seen since 2005 is a rapid increase in the willingness of provinces either to put their money where their mouth is or to put their services and their experts on the table. This is a very encouraging sign.