That is a very important question. I think it points to the complexity of different orders of government involved in the regulatory game in Canada, if I can use that word. You used your own caveat about protecting data and privacy as the biggest hurdle.
At a theoretical level, there is nothing that prevents two orders of government from co-operating in terms of reducing regulatory burden. The rubber hits the road when we start peeling back all of the rules around data sharing, around the jurisdiction of those governments, around whether or not form 283 actually captures everything that is needed in form 378 and getting down to what is actually required.
We do have a regulatory co-operation table under the Canada free trade act with all provinces and territories. Canada is one seat at the table. Those are the types of issues we are trying to work through from an intergovernmental process perspective. It takes time.
Everybody has good intentions on regulatory co-operation and reconciliation. We are making good progress. I'm happy to provide some information on that, about where we are going with the provinces and territories, but governments are committed to reducing the duplication effort across the country.