Okay. The concern, first of all, has been around trying to make sure everyone understands—and we have been doing consultation to hopefully try to alleviate and put clarity in those technology dialogues, which is not always easy.
There is no such thing as a pre-committed $1 billion contract on GENS, first of all. It is optional. All of the departments have their own money to run their networks. They don't need new money to replace their networks. It's an ongoing operation. They need a vehicle to do so.
The small and medium enterprises have been rightfully concerned that maybe one contract would commit everything in one chunk of work to one industry player and that there's no other option or everything is locked.
There is still residual concern that GENS, the way it is packaged today, had some pieces of professional services still embedded in it that could be procured separately. We have issued a draft statement of interest for qualification this past July-August.
We have received a fair amount of very good feedback from large, medium, and small firms, and we are doing the analysis now to see what residual components of those concerns are still there, to see if more changes will be brought in.