Yes. What I can say is that the University of Toronto is a public institution. We have signed a memorandum of understanding with the tri-council that gives us funding. All the funds are conditional on the fact that we have to abide by the third edition of the guideline that the Public Health Agency of Canada has in place. So, institution-wide, we do that.
If this bill were to pass tomorrow and there is no security clearance requirement, as we have been promised by the Public Health Agency of Canada, we wouldn't need to do anything differently as an institution. It may not be the case with other private sectors because they don't have to abide by the rules. But for us, we have to meet that in order to get government funding.
So as a biosafety officer, I don't need to do anything differently from what I do currently if the security requirement is left out. And we strongly urge that this get lifted for risk group two, because that will have an enormous financial impact on us.