First, to touch on the point you were making about the prevalence of dumping, we know it's going on. Our producers are very aware of it. To give you a particularly prescient example, I get all kinds of solicitations in my email to buy Chinese steel. I get about five or six a week. They're not particularly sophisticated, but the solicitations come in.
I followed up on it. I'll give you a really recent demo, because every once in a while I'll offer or suggest that I might be interested in buying steel, just out of personal curiosity. The willingness on the other end of the email to tell you how to circumvent existing duties, to import product through third countries to get around even the laws or the measures we currently have in this country, is extraordinarily easy to find. I give domestic buyers a lot of credit for staying with domestic producers, because if you're willing to overlook a terrible practice, there are other options out there.
The steps proposed in this bill are certainly meaningful. The continuance of investigations, no more sort of parking investigations at the preliminary stage, giving CBSA more time to get to the bottom of what's going on, is extraordinarily important from our perspective. The changes around the process of expiry reviews that ultimately move the initiation of the review closer to the day of the expiration, change some timelines, and redefine some process, ultimately mean that when the CITT, the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, makes a finding, this will functionally extend that finding, that evidence-based or procedural-based finding, for 10 months.
The ongoing consultation on another range of issues we hope is going to provide additional legislative benefits very shortly. We appreciate that the Department of Finance needs to consult on these matters. That consultation is scheduled to end around the end of June. We're hopeful of additional legislation shortly thereafter to continue keeping us on a level footing with our NAFTA partners.