There are two aspects to it. Both sides you've mentioned are expressed in the industry. Some people look at this prior approval process as a regulatory burden that they have to meet, and they would like to do away with it. But on the other hand, those same people often say that one of the benefits of that system is that everybody has to meet the same rules. You don't get products on the shelf that all of a sudden, as Richard was indicating, don't meet Canadian requirements and then you have to go and complain and try to get that product off the shelf, which seems to be kind of a backwards way of doing it if there's a better way of doing it in order to prevent that product from getting there in the first place.
So while they lament the lack of regulatory freedom, at the same time they recognize the benefits that these regulations can bring in levelling the playing field among competitors.