Thank you very much for those questions. If part-way through I can't read my own writing, I'll call on you to address them.
The first one has to do with the timelines for the regulations. The minister announced that the development of the regulations would begin in October of last year. Public consultations began on December 10. In Campbell River, we met for two days. I won't go through the whole list of meetings we've had, but we've had a number in Campbell River, Nanaimo, and Comox, of a fairly large and public nature. We've also had a series of bilateral meetings with more or less anybody who has asked us for such so that we have had plenty of feedback on what people feel should be in the regulation, what should not be in it, what it should do, and so on.
We are expecting that those consultations will wrap up, as I say, by the end of this month or maybe slip slightly into early April. We have established a regulatory drafting team now, and they are in the very preliminary stages. They haven't put fingers to keyboard yet on any of the stuff, because we still have feedback to come from the consultations, but they are doing the initial preparatory work, collecting data, comparing to other regulations, that kind of thing.
The regulation will be drafted over the course of the next six to eight weeks. It is our expectation that we would bring forward a draft regulation for consideration by Treasury Board in the late May or early June timeframe. I'm recognizing of course that we're not in complete control of that schedule, so I'm giving you all the approximations as we go. Assuming Treasury Board is comfortable with the proposal that the minister makes to them, the regulation probably would be tabled in Canada Gazette sometime in around mid- to late June, perhaps slightly earlier, if we're able to accelerate some of the internal process work.
We are anticipating a 60-day public review period for the regulation. The requirement under the federal regulatory policy is 30 days, but it has come to our notice that aquaculture is occasionally controversial in British Columbia, and there may not be a unanimous view, in terms of the commentary received, so we're affording more time for commentary to come in.
Once that period closes--so now we are, give or take, talking about the end of August--we will analyze the feedback that's received, both the information from the public review of the regulation itself and anything else we learn as we go forward. Our anticipation is that, based on that analysis, the revisions necessary will be proposed back to Treasury Board for consideration as a final rule that would come forward. This is dependent obviously on Treasury Board's timing. I don't have a specific date by any means for this, but it will be towards the end of October. Our intent is that the regulation would come into effect on or before December 18, 2010.
In parallel with that, I should just point out that, to go back to some of the questions from earlier on, we are simultaneously building a program to implement all of that, and the timelines for that are moving apace in terms of booking office space and people, and buying boats and trucks, and all those kinds of good stuff. So that's happening in parallel with it.
Does that answer the question on the timelines okay?