I'll just add that when we looked at the possible amendments to the various structures, your first question on the diversity of firms and types that are covered by the three acts in question was not lost on us. Of those 270,000 firms, as my colleague points out, the vast majority are small and medium-sized enterprises, private corporations, so annual voting and a number of those things simply won't apply because they're not distributing companies.
The same thing goes for co-operatives, although if there was a surge of distributing co-operatives, they would be subject to the same rules.
However, the goal within the overall package of amendments was to balance ease of doing business and administrative burden with appropriate checks and balances on governance and allowing for shareholder input where it is called for, and that's particularly the case when you're trading in the public securities markets.