Thank you. I understand the question now. What this allows the Minister to do is to ensure that the education body is carrying out its public responsibility and, in some instances, they may not be doing that. The communities may determine that the people are doing the right thing, but the investigation may reveal that that is not, in fact, the case. The information has to be made available to the community so they can make that determination, where it is in the interest of the community to receive that information. There are situations where other factors could come into play -- where there is legal action, etcetera -- and we would have to be concerned about that.
The other thing is, even if the Minister were to dissolve the education body, it would really be up to the electors to make their own decision after a Minister takes action with regard to those seeking re-election. It is really no different, I think, from the municipal election process and the investigation and dissolving powers in that legislation. That's the basis on which we're dealing with this. Unfortunately, our experiences as an Assembly have shown that there are circumstances where we have to use this type of power. It's the matter of the protection of the public interest. We're also ensuring that public funds are spent properly.