First, to clarify this, the particular clause we're looking at applies to the Electricity and Gas Inspection Act, not the Weights and Measures Act. So fuel dispensers won't be covered by this particular proposed amendment.
The other thing to point out is that I'm not entirely certain that this would be the best section to address that concern. We'd have to look at it a little more closely. But further to that, the accreditation program under the Electricity and Gas Inspection Act has been in place since 1986. When the program was established, we looked at perhaps having some mandatory training requirements. As we established the process, we looked to see that the Canadian Gas Association, the Canadian Electricity Association, and the municipal electricity associations as well, all had training and certification processes in place. Most of the utilities that are accredited organizations hire from that pool of certified “verifiers”, if we can put it that way. So it doesn't seem to me that it would be an enhancement of the current process.
We have 20 to 25 years' worth of audit data demonstrating that things are working fine. The advantage we have with the current process is that it puts us in a position to monitor, rather than manage, a training process, which is more cost-effective for us.