Part of the development of this legislation has required quite a considerable amount of consultation, not only with the private sector but with NGOs and others. That is an ongoing responsibility the government has and that we take seriously.
One of the things that came up in a two-day workshop we conducted in 2012 was an acknowledgement that while facilitation payments are permitted under the current treaty, most countries—with the exception of Canada, the U.S., Australia, and New Zealand—were really left out, and we should really be moving on that. The issue of facilitation payments is very much in the mind of not only companies, which find it confusing and want clarity, but the NGOs with which we're working.
In developing this legislation, the suggestion was to make it clear that facilitation payments were going to go, but we do need to educate our own people, and that may take just a wee bit of time. We don't know the exact time at the present, but we are in consultation with a lot of companies and we will be providing government with some advice. Our expectation is that it will be sooner rather than later, in terms of coming into force.