The payment protection issue is extremely complex. We've already heard from Innovation, Science and Economic Development on the complexity of the BIA and an unwillingness to open the BIA because of the complexity of the BIA unto itself. One issue is the challenge relative to the bankruptcy act in the past.
There has been a lot of movement in the last five years due to the work we've seen with the regulatory co-operation council and a greater understanding of the complexity of the issue and the division between the insolvency component, the dispute resolution component, and the destination inspection component. In the past, all three were mixed together. That tended to confuse similar systems. As we heard earlier, can you implement this all in Canada? Well, it's not quite the same as what we have in the U.S. Our bankruptcy rules are different and our models are different. There was always a challenge when we started to do identical programming.
Where we are today is very different from where we were in the past, relative to now having the DRC and the dispute resolution mechanism similar to the dispute mechanism under PACA in the U.S. We each have reciprocal DIS programs, as Ms. Fowlie mentioned. The stopgap here is insolvency. The key that you will see when DRC presents on Wednesday is that the insolvency tool that's being presented does not have to sit under the BIA. The insolvency tool will and can stand alone. It's a stand-alone piece of legislation, and it can talk to the insolvency component only. When a company becomes insolvent at a federal level, that takes away the provincial issue, and the DRC can then be involved.