One of the concerns the committee had as we went through each of the departments was a truly amazing number of initiatives. Most initiatives are good. Most of them have a constituency that really wants to see the initiatives accomplished. It's always difficult to choose, politically, between a lot of compelling issues.
The problem, though, as the committee sees it is that the government does not have the critical mass, it doesn't have the people power to do them all. What invariably happens in any government -- and this has been true right across the country -- if you try to do too much you do everything poorly, or you only get half of them done. So the feeling is -- especially with the new centralized structure you have now -- that there has to be a better fettering system. The Premier and the Minister of Finance have to work together with the Ministers and the other departments and decide how many of these major initiatives can the government have any chance of undertaking. The list, here, goes on for pages. It's the committee's feeling that it would be absolutely impossible. You're going to paralyse yourself as a government by trying to do too much. This, hopefully, is a way for the government to take a little bit of a vote and impose some discipline on itself as to the number of achievable priorities. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.