You mention a great point. When George Bush came into power and they didn't want stem cell research, we got lots of scientists. It was their loss, our gain. We got lots of scientists from the States who couldn't do research there and they came to Canada, exactly. If we have such a restrictive rule, we will lose scientists to elsewhere.
But the reality is, if I go back to my initial statement, that if the security requirement, as promised, gets lifted off risk group two, and if, as we have discussed with the Public Health Agency of Canada, they adopt what the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission does--namely, you get certified as an institution so that you can deal with anything under risk group three--it will not have any paperwork burden or administrative burden on us.
There are two “ifs” that I put: one, if they give us an institutional licence, which they've agreed to because it will be good for them as well, since they won't have to do 250 labs individually; and two, if they elevate the security requirement for risk group two. My clearance on the bill is that if these two, as promised, go out, then we won't have to do anything differently than we do. If other institutions are not doing it, they owe it to their staff and students to do it, because that is the right thing to do. I can't talk on their behalf.