I can start. Dr. Ross can chime in if she wants.
On the part of the bill that would be most relevant to what you speak of in terms of early detection, clearly there's a need for early detection and clearly we weren't doing it well. Waste water is a technology that became more used, probably for the first time globally, through technological innovation and need. That became very apparent very quickly. It was not quickly and uniformly adopted, I would say, and that's still the case.
This also speaks to part of the purpose of a bill such as this, to take things that can be useful and not require them to be used, but to collect the data and then, where places want to use that information, that they be able to do so. There are two bits there. One is innovation that quickly comes to pragmatic use, and the second is standardization of collection of data that can then be used in different provinces in slightly different ways that respect federalism and then the associated provincial jurisdiction. Also, three, it comes back to the idea on a bigger scale that things that are in a research domain have to become used and tested in a practical way, quickly and without bureaucratic restriction. In the pandemic preparedness world, parts of this bill would be useful in doing that.