Yes, but first I might like to touch on your other question, about AI. We did hear one really good example at the external advisory committee. The City of Kelowna is doing a pilot whereby they're looking at taking housing approvals from weeks and months to a matter of seconds for those basic approvals. Again, it's another example of how working towards regulatory excellence can deliver better outcomes for Canadians, because those staff who were working on those approvals at the City of Kelowna can now be working on more complex approvals.
That's an example of a win-win, and I think that we need to look at equipping our regulators to be world class in Canada.
In terms of your question about interprovincial trade, I don't think we're making nearly enough use of mutual recognition. We tend to approach these things one at a time: “Let's look at why we have different standards for first aid kits in every province and, okay, we'll spend two years aligning those standards.” It's a very inefficient way to go about removing barriers.
Just saying, though, that gravity works the same whether you're in one province or another and we're going to mutually accept that if you're in compliance with one province's standards, that's good enough for another province—unless there's a good reason not to, and then we'll negative-list—would be a way better approach to accomplish more, faster, across Canada on the interprovincial trade front.