It's a fairly detailed and involved process.
What normally happens is the legislation is drafted by a committee that has provincial members, federal members, and justice members. We draft the federal legislation first. Then it goes back and forth between the provinces and the federal government. We go back and forth looking at the different aspects. Then there are consultations with different experts in the community and experts in the domain. Then there is the process of the drafting expertise that goes on, and there's a back and forth that takes a fairly significant amount of time to ensure there are no unintended aspects in either of the provincial cases. To a certain degree, there are fairly detailed negotiations to deal with points of difference, points of nuance, points of interpretation, and we draft together for extended periods. We then settle on the federal bill. It then goes out to the provinces, which draft their own mirror versions that have the right references to their own legislation. Then it all comes back together for a review by everybody ensemble, if you will, and then we move forward separately into introducing it in each of the legislatures.
In the case of the two provinces, they did so earlier this year. Their legislative agenda is different from Parliament's here, federally. Both bills passed and received royal assent. Their legislatures have shorter processes, if you will, and fewer stages of review.