I appreciate that. I want to make sure that we actually understand what we're talking about at the table because this is actually something that's outside the purview normally of this particular committee.
Just for edification, to see if I have this right, without incorporation by reference, if Canada had ever wanted to change its regulatory environment to match something that an international governing body or council or standardization agency might have had, we would have basically taken a copy-and-paste approach into the regulatory approach, put it into part I of the Gazette, gone through the time period, and then put it into part II. That was how we would have changed the regulations, right?
Incorporation by reference is like the Internet. It creates a hyperlink from the regulatory body that's allowed through the legislation, as Mrs. Proud was talking about, with some of the legislation, and it hyperlinks right to a document that somebody else might be in charge of, which I think you, Mr. Walter, rightly pointed out, usually involves a very credible oversight. Usually Canadians are involved in all of these kinds of things, which improves the efficiency and efficacy of the regulatory process, yet it still goes through the gazetting process. Do I understand that correctly?
Mrs. Proud, is that how that would still work?