As I have already stated, when it became clear that there was a problem with medical isotopes, we took action.
When it was just in a scheduled shutdown it was not clear that this would go on for an extended period of time. When it became clear that this was going on for an extended period of time, that we were beyond just a regularly scheduled shutdown, when it was clear that the Nuclear Safety Commission was not going to re-license so that they could get out of a shutdown, that's when everyone clued in, starting with the Society of Nuclear Medicine specialists, and then others very quickly, that we were in a situation where the health and safety of Canadians were affected. That's when I became part of the story, not before, because I'm not the line minister.
When there's a nexus with health and safety, of course, I'm going to be involved. And I can give you the timeline, but the very day we found out is the very day we started to act.