Mr. Chair, if I may, our original intention was to make sure that the business community doesn't have a patch of different rules across provinces. Business is more and more becoming national and international. In fact, we did emphasize that nowadays if you want to do business in Europe you have to have a piece of legislation that's acceptable to Europeans about protecting personal information. In fact, they went through our bill and they actually deemed it to be acceptable. So you can do cross-sharing of databases and information. They are quite happy with our legislation as is.
The same thing goes within a province. We didn't want one business to have onerous requirements in one province that are different from those in another province. That's why we established this national minimum standard, those 10 code provisions to try to put a national standard without imposing the specific on individual provinces in terms of the way they manage their own privacy issues.