Good. From what you're saying, it sounds like there's a lot of goodwill to work through this and make it happen in some respect.
I had a couple of more detailed questions. I remember being previously involved in this with Mr. Lunn and the department. But just to give me a gauge as to how you're working through some of these issues, I'll give you a couple of concrete examples and maybe you could tell me where the current thinking is. There are two examples that have struck me as not necessarily problematic but challenging. One is where young people will leave home voluntarily and then disappear. What rights do they have, in a sense, if their location is discovered? What responsibilities, obligations, rights, do various parties have if this person has actually left home voluntarily and doesn't want to be identified?
The second example is if you have a missing person, they're on the index, and their DNA is discovered at a crime scene, for example. They might in fact be a suspect. Tell me where the thinking is on that. I may have picked bad examples, but they stuck in my memory as being issues that needed to be worked through somewhat carefully.