As we move to a process whereby we abandon the traditions and the habits of the 20th century, where we believed there was a room where the six policy analysts who understood this issue the most held all
the information and were the people most capable of det
ermining the proper course of action for the country, to a model where those six highly skilled and highly informed people are charged and energized with guiding a much broader conversation, whether it's within Ottawa or across the country, and pulling in inputs externally and anal
...[+++]yzing and presenting them within context for the government, we'll get to a place where that sort of oversight may not be necessary.