I think the challenge is that if you have rules and we as lobbyists abide by them and we tell our members to abide by them, if there's a perceived infraction, or if someone says to the commissioner, “We believe so-and-so might be in jeopardy of infringing a rule,” I think it is incumbent on that person to let the lobbyist know. They can explain themselves, as opposed to having an investigation and a number of other people and sources being told and it maybe getting to that lobbyist third- or fourth-hand. It gets to be quite stressful.
When the rules are applied to some organizations or individuals, at the end of the day the common courtesy would be to let that person know if there might be a perceived infraction of those rules. That's what we're asking.