Sure.
Mr. Volpe, in terms of the act, in terms of the legislation of which you speak, we are directed, under section 4, to liaise.
I don't know if Gary can tell me the wording of section 4....
National objectives? Yes, I got it, thank you.
I'll say a couple of things, Mr. Volpe. First of all, fundamentally what you're talking about is the division of powers. It comes straight from the Constitution. In fact, that hit the Supreme Court of Canada only last June. There was a ruling that set out the law in the matter. Now, you're not talking about setting law, you're talking about communication and compromise and working together. The Constitution doesn't bump that out of the act.
Under section 4, we are charged with managing the marine infrastructure and services, as a commercial manager that encourages and takes into account input from users and the community in which a port is located. So in the national marine policy of the country, there in section 4 is the charge that, if I take what you're saying, ought to be given to the port authorities. We had that here under section 4.
I'd also point out--