I think the importance of this initiative is to start that conversation.
When this bill was first announced, there was cross-country media coverage in newspapers and media of all languages. What it does is start the conversation in people's homes throughout the country. To have them look at it and ask themselves, “Do we know somebody? Did we notice something? Should we be more careful?” This thing can happen. I think that's the message that comes with something with such a high profile as this, in an area that until now has been hidden away and people have ignored.
Obviously we have to fill the gaps. We can't leave this on its own. We have to make sure that people understand this issue.
I want to comment briefly about how to reach through cultural and language isolation, because of course it's an issue for the Chinese community as well. That situation in Toronto with the woman being left in the garage through the winter involved a Chinese family, which, if you accept the stereotype of Asian filial obligations, was certainly a “man bites dog” story, but there was wide media coverage of that story, and our reaction to it got wide coverage. To the extent that something like this gets wide coverage, it doesn't matter about the language barriers. We have very effective other-language media across the country, and they will tell the community that this law is in place. That starts the conversation.