There are two transformations that really have to happen. One is that we have to move from the existing system that lives within the Canadian Intellectual Property Office and the commissioner of patents and the registrar of trademarks, which maintains this list of who they are and who can appear. Right now, the professional body is currently an association.
The Intellectual Property Institute of Canada is a professional association, so what essentially will happen is that there will be a hived-off entity that becomes the college with these ministerial appointments and new governors elected from within the profession. It will then, once it's ready, in some ways, inherit the responsibilities that used to live within CIPO—Canadian Intellectual Property Office—but with a considerable new process around them in terms of fairness and due process and public interest.