Again, I think I have to defer to my colleagues in the wealth and estate section in terms of the specific recommendations for their piece.
The reference to streamlining the regulation is, of course, a general regulatory scheme that the charities and not-for-profit lawyers encounter on a day-to-day basis. In a number of cases, those rules are drafted quite broadly, and without, often, a clear tax-policy rationale. What we're seeking in the general regulatory framework that applies to charities, as opposed to the donation piece, is that we look at whether there's an opportunity to streamline those. We all know the pressures charities are under to keep administrative costs reasonable. That kind of broad drafting makes it extremely difficult for charities.