Perhaps I can help. When CEPA 1999 was passed, it enumerated the list of documents that the law required the government to include on the registry. In Bill S-5, one thing the government intended to do in multiple places, including in the registry, was to increase public access to information.
This amendment, while shorter, in fact expands the scope of documents the government would need to publish on the registry. Whereas previously it had only to publish the items listed in the lengthy list of provisions, now it is required, at a very high level, to publish all notices and documents published or made publicly available by the minister. It's now a much broader requirement with respect to the kinds of information and documents we will need to publish on the registry. That's the substantive implication of the amendment.