Mr. Chairman, the report is not officially endorsed by this Cabinet. It is a report that is well received, we see it as a timely report. Many of the recommendations in here have already been acted on. I have tried to address some of them, and some of them have been passed on to the appropriate agencies. We believe that the report requires wide circulation. It is a public document and where the recommendations are directed to other agencies, for instance the federal government, we have passed on those recommendations. There are some which I have said require legislative change which are very straightforward. For instance, as a result of a recent court case, we have initiated the drafting of legislative changes so that outdated legislation is corrected immediately. Many of our laws are seen as being somewhat outdated. In the long-term plan, we will look at reviewing many of these areas but we do not have a comprehensive response. We have not acted hastily, we think that many of these recommendations are going to be directed back at us. For instance, once the women's organizations and the aboriginal organizations have looked at them, suggestions will come in from different parts of our communities and, I am sure, from the Legislature.
Some of them are straightforward and we have acted on them, and some we have passed on to the relevant agencies. At some time or another there will be a written summary provided to the Members, updating them on the current status of many of the recommendations that I try to do. We can provide that in the next few days, but it will not mean that it is an official government response. It will be an update on the way in which some of the recommendations have been acted on already and the way in which some of them will be passed on to agencies.