Certainly. In a normal Canada gazetting-type process, what you would see is the publication of the intended regulatory instrument, so in this case you'd see a draft policy direction published. You'd have a timeline, in which stakeholders would have an opportunity to send comments or feedback on the proposed approach, and then those comments, that feedback, is typically, in many cases, published, so that everybody has a sense of the feedback that others gave. That's usually done in what's called part I of the Canada Gazette. The government reflects on all those things and determines if it needs to make any course corrections to the proposed approach, and then you have the finalization of the policy direction.
Kathy, is there anything you'd like to add on that?