Thank you, Chair.
I heard the member opposite say that it's hard to get a good agreement. I heard that several minutes ago.
It seems to me that this is why we started this whole process to begin with. This is not the first minister who's tried to tackle this issue, but is the first who's really brought it to this point, where it looks like we will have a bill in place.
I recall it being said at some meeting before—it might have been Mr. Watson—that when both sides are a little bit cranky, it's probably not a bad bill.
I'm not sure if you intended just to get people cranky, but it strikes me that there are some “gives and puts”. I recall asking at a prior meeting why it ever had to get to this point. That's almost immaterial at this stage, except I think that what we're trying to do is change mindsets, and perhaps change expectations, certainly of the players involved.
I apologize for putting it this way, but have you done any best guesses as to how often you think, as a result of this legislation, an arbitrator might have to be involved? We heard some comments earlier today that there's a hope that they don't have to be used. You hear that a lot, but I would presume, in your analysis of this, you have some sense of what you might imagine the reality of that to be. It's one thing to have best intentions, and then there's reality.
Have you put some thought as to how often an arbitrator might really have to get involved in these kinds of discussion? Or do you think—I guess as a corollary to this—you've put in sufficient legislation to compel both parties to not want to go to arbitration? I guess that's the real question when it's all done.
Do you have any thoughts about that, please?