From my perspective, I would say yes.
And perhaps just to talk a little bit more about what Shari mentioned earlier, back in the 1990s when we were dealing with the formation of the codes and the national hearings were being set up, the question arose of whether there should be a body set up to screen all these programs before they go to air. Somebody did the mathematics, and it was in the tens of thousands of hours of programming that would have to be screened.
From a practical, operational basis, it just would not work. I know, for example, that in many cases a lot of the prime time programming that is delivered to stations is only delivered on the day of the broadcast, because the timeline for production is so close to air time. It's not available three or four weeks in advance, which you'd require if those were supposed to be pre-screened by a particular body.
What the broadcasters do is, when they do get it in, they screen it against the Canadian standards, because all broadcasters are responsible for what they put on the air. So there is screening related to Canadian standards. There are all kinds of instances where edits have been made in programs and decisions have been made in programs, where the Canadian station has made changes to the shows so that they conform to the standards that have been agreed to in the Canadian system.