We'd see it as the implementation of smart regulations, of tailoring the requirements to the particular sector that you're dealing with, which is a government objective.
For electricity and natural gas, we're dealing with larger stakeholders, larger utilities. They have very strong associations that have a gas measurement school on an annual basis. The municipal electricity associations have a variety of training programs in place for the meter shop technicians, and provincial bodies--Hydro One, for example--have an electricity metering school as well. It would be adding a layer of bureaucracy, so to speak, when it may not necessarily be required. They'd be trying to fix something that isn't broken.