We've had those discussions with colleagues in other jurisdictions, at the provincial and international levels, and I think it's important to remember that doing that kind of cleanup is fairly tedious. It's one of the reasons those rules and the associated reporting burden have been around for the past several decades for most OECD countries. They take a lot of time and effort to clean up.
In the case of policy renewal, the commitment was very clear that we wanted to have a major review of all of them—there were 180 of them—with all of their associated directives and standards. So it is quite a pile, trust me, to review. We didn't just want to trash them and improvise a new set of rules that would create more problems and more headaches for departments thereafter. So in order to do it in a thoughtful and structured fashion, it does require careful review and discussion with departments to do it properly.