I don't know that I can talk personally on whether we're unanimous or not among the three of us. We'd have to caucus, I suppose.
There are a bunch of measures that I heard from my two colleagues that we would be supportive of, and I hope the same is true for them. I think there are, as you said, many obvious problems. Some of them have obvious solutions. Some don't and that's fair, but some do. The perfect can be the enemy of the good. I hope that when these recommendations are put forward by the committee, we can push forward with the low-hanging fruit, at least.
We can expect a lobby from other folks who are affected by this stuff on some of this, but there should be some very simple things that we can agree on. I would go, for instance, to the transparency piece. It's very difficult to argue against that. Here we are, talking about what a poor job the carriers are doing, and we all believe that, but I don't know that any of us know exactly how many complaints they're receiving internally, how many they're disposing of, how many people they're saying yes to and how many people they're saying no to. That information they keep to themselves.
There are other industries.... I think telecom was cited. You can look up in this country how many complaints each of the telco carriers had, as an example, and how they were disposed of. In the U.S., you can do that now. A lot of these carriers fly in the U.S. In the U.S., you have to provide this information, and it's available online for anybody to judge performance.
That's not the be-all and end-all, but it is a very simple example of something that would help all of us do a better job and put on pressure where it's warranted.