As I outlined at the beginning, there are only 20 meetings between now and December. A minimum of four are going to have to go to officials, to estimates, to viewing the reports. That leaves you 16 meetings.
We can do a lot of talking, but at the end of the day, if you don't put a report forward, you've had a lot of discussions but you haven't put anything forward to the government asking the government to do anything. So if we want to accomplish something, and I know you do—and the issue is, I think, appreciated by all of us and of interest to all of us—it will be the committee's decision as to which way you want to go.
I just think it's impossible for us to do both, and if we want to accomplish something, we need to pick one or the other—that is my suggestion—and it will be the will of the committee.
I have Mr. Stanton and Ms. Neville, and then Ms. Smith again.
Mr. Stanton.