Well, for example, in Ontario they go into schools, they go into libraries, and they educate people on their rights under the legislation and on what it means to be in a democracy and so forth, and it's very useful.
It's one thing to have legislation that allows you to do something and then have only a very small percentage of the population that knows this. I think what's really behind this is the commissioner wants express ability to do some of what he's already doing through his website and through speeches and various things that he does. Giving him the express opportunity to do this as part of his jurisdiction means he can do it in a more comprehensive fashion, I'm assuming, and we certainly support that.
The goals of the legislation, as you've heard my colleague David mention earlier, are sufficiently important that there should be more information about it out there in the public domain.