Certainly. Thank you for your question. It's an excellent one.
First of all, as I indicated previously, one of our responsibilities is to determine the cause and origin of fires in the majority of jurisdictions across the country. By doing our analysis, quite often we're finding that the cause or the origin happens to be a particular electrical appliance or electrical cord and so forth.
One of the challenges we are having, however, is trying to quantitatively determine how significant that problem is across the country. If I can hearken back to a few years ago, we learned that there was a fluorescent bulb that was manufactured that was supposedly meeting standards, but there were elements of that manufacturer that were non-compliant. What happened was that the time horizon, from the time we started to make observations in the field to the time the general public was alerted, was a very long, extended one.
We would offer that we would see that the introduction of this bill would absolutely shorten the timelines. We'd be able to have a more robust system for alerting our citizens and having information go to the powers that be in a much more timely fashion.