When we come down to making the regulations and exemptions, what we're constantly trying to be faithful to is that objective. We have very clear, rigorous discussions about making sure that we're focusing on the harm. For example, the sponsorship element leads to a positive health outcome. That's where you have a good rationale. You bring it in. You say, “Yes, we want our kids to play sports,” so you make that kind of exemption. That's where the policy starts to fit together and you get policy cohesion.
We are consulting a lot with authorities in Quebec to make sure we get this right. They've had a lot of experience with this, and in our view, they have been able to pinpoint the types of advertising people care about and what is directed at children. We can learn a lot from that. We also have a lot of good expertise available to inform us really what to look at.
At the end of the day, it's also regulation-making that is public. You have to observe the goal of the instrument. Then that goes out for public consultation and we weigh carefully all of the input that we do here, in that exercise. Those discussions will get picked up in that regulation-making.