Actually, there is an example, if I could come in here. There was a teaching hospital that had a fire. The lab had a biohazard sign on it. The firefighter didn't enter. Four million dollars later, when they got the PI, they entered the lab. There is a consequence of putting a level two sign on your door.
They have asked us, saying that they're going to do it like CNSC does. You give a blanket list saying that these are the bugs you have and these are the locations you have, and we don't have to go through them every time we get a risk group two organism. The only restriction that is going to apply for security clearance and others is the select agents. Not even risk group three, like HIV, can be used as bioterrorism means, so it's going to be select agents, the agents that could be misused in the wrong hands. Those are the guys that have to go through security clearance and others. That was the understanding we had when we met with the public health people at the University of Toronto.