Well, CEPA has the authority to deal with consumer products, but it generally deals with environmental emissions. With the chemicals management plan, they've inched a little bit more toward consumer products, and we saw that a little with bisphenol A.
Certainly some provinces—and Ontario is certainly one of them, and B.C. is another—want to move further ahead, but they tend to look to the feds to take action first, because you don't want to have all of these different jurisdictions with different regulatory systems functioning in the same economic market.
This bill, though, deals with consumer products. From an environmental perspective and from a health perspective, that's a very important aspect of the regulatory system we've been neglecting. In a lot of cases, these are the new “PCBs”. When you look at things like perfluorinated compounds, flame retardants, bisphenol A, and lead, it's from consumer products that we are getting a lot of human exposure.