At the present time, if you're seeking that space, you automatically go through the process. It sort of pre-empts fraud, right? They're told that they're either verified or not verified.
If it's an individual who's already in the institution and is an employee of the institution or a student and has sought space before the policy existed and is now navigating to occupy more indigenous-specific space, it triggers the policy so that they then have to go through the process.
We weren't able to grandfather everyone into the policy immediately who was already in those indigenous spaces in the institution. They would have to navigate through the institution in order for it to trigger the policy. It would have been violating the human rights.
Now, when a professor who's been there for 20 years wants to apply for a grant that's indigenous-specific, they have to check the box that they're indigenous and then immediately they're sent to my office to go through the verification process.
There is a way that it triggers those who might have been in positions and had been fraudulent. At that point, if they're not able to successfully go through the process, they're denied the ability to hold that space. If someone is—