A brief response, yes.
The measure that's in the budget bill before you deals with a situation where someone has an intellectual disability but reaches the age of majority and then goes into a financial institution, and the person in the financial institution who is going to draw up the contract for the RDSP is unsure of whether that person has capacity to enter into the contract.
Rather than go through the huge procedure—which it is in most of Canada—to have an administrator appointed, or a trustee, which is often demeaning to the individual in question, who is capable of handling his or her own affairs for the most part, there's a very good mechanism in the province of British Columbia. I've encouraged all of the other provinces to emulate that. Some are. Some have not, and this is a concern, because there are many people—including in Ontario—who have been in effect prohibited from opening an RDSP because of the absence of a mechanism.
So we're creating a mechanism in the Income Tax Act in this budget, a temporary one out to 2016, whereby other family members will be able to be the holder of the RDSP.