I appreciate that, and I don't want to put you in an unfair position as a departmental official disagreeing with the request of the minister. That's not my intention, because I was one of those who asked whether this committee shouldn't ask the minister to give us the bill on first reading so that we could shape the bill and then bring it more clearly and more quickly and expeditiously for approval into the House. I'm actually just simply asking, from an efficiency and experience perspective, whether the most practical thing for this committee to do would be to rely on that vast body of data and knowledge that you have, in order to give us the insights that we're going to need.
From what I can decipher from what you're telling us, we're going to go into a minefield of interdepartmental competitiveness. And I don't mean that negatively, but in your last response to me, Monsieur Grégoire, you said the application comes in to you, you say what it is, once you give your approval off it goes to environmental assessment, and then maybe from there to something else.
I think if we want to do things appropriately for our fellow citizens, we probably want to be able to make sure that the safety measures associated with some of that process are dealt with in as quick a way as possible. I'm not sure that's going to be done by us. You've quite rightly pointed out three alternatives.
Again, I don't want to put you on the spot, and if you don't want to answer, that's fine. You've given us three alternatives, but I'm just wondering whether this committee's going to be spinning its wheels for several months when the answers are already there.