Yes, the more tools you can offer the Competition Bureau to investigate a specific situation, the more efficient they will be to make sure that anti-competitive measures will be prohibited and sanctioned. I would say that the best is to come, if they have the capacity to do so.
I reiterate that on top of that, at the end of the day you need to have the leadership, which is paramount to make sure that the law will be applied. If they don't have something that will force them to act, it's a question of priorities. They'll go on regarding the means they have and the priorities they establish. Therefore, if in some aspect of the daily life of consumers in Canada, they consider this not to be important, then it's not going to be on top of the file, and you'll wait until it's the pleasure or the sentiment of the management of the bureau to consider it.