Thank you very much for the question.
The Supreme Court decision gave us some quite helpful clarity about the federal role versus the provincial role in this area. Essentially, the Supreme Court upheld some of the provisions of the act and struck down others. All of the activities the Assisted Human Reproduction Agency was doing were ones that in fact it will continue to do.
Some of the prohibitions of the act, such as the prohibition against cloning, for example, and others, were upheld. They are working with the patient and provider communities. Those are things they will continue to do in terms of providing up-to-date information. The board itself has passed a budget that is significantly below that level while it awaits the consultations and the final decisions of the government in terms of what role and what size of budget the agency will have going forward.
There is work the board is doing. They continue to do the work that is important and that they have been doing. That was what the Supreme Court made clear they could continue to do. Some of the proposed areas the Supreme Court said were within provincial jurisdiction. Those are areas, clearly, the agency will not be pursuing.