Having “generally accepted best practices” in there seems to me to be a pretty high bar and an important concept that would potentially allow for the evolution of best practices to be referenced in the bill.
In my work before I got into politics, I came from a world where promising practices and best practices were things we often talked about. They would emerge, specifically, in areas where technology or innovation was happening. It seemed to be fairly commonplace for fast-changing industries to evolve quite quickly, and sometimes promising practices were the precursor to eventually determining best practices.
Can you unpack for us the impact of taking that out? How would that impact the bill and the strength of the bill?