Sure.
Not surprisingly it's a bit simpler than it is in the European Union with 28 sovereign states. Once we finish the remainder of the technical negotiations, chief negotiators will initial that agreement. It will be sent off for legal scrubbing. It will go through the translation process. It will then be brought back, and there will be a cabinet approval process at that point. That will be followed by tabling the agreement in the House of Commons for a sitting period of 21 days. That will give the opportunity for debate. It could go to committee. Eventually it would go through that process and get approval.
At the same time, or shortly after that, we would have to go through the process of designing what kinds of changes to legislation would need to be made in order to bring ourselves into compliance with the new obligations under the agreement. That bill would have to go through the House, through the usual process, through committee, to be approved as part of the whole package in moving the CETA forward and ratifying it.
Those are essentially the steps that we would take before we'd be prepared to put the agreement into place.