I'd add one point that you may find as useful information. Subsequent to the release of the Bilson task force report, there was a case that made its way to the Supreme of Canada. Mowat, I believe, was the name of the case, and the result of that case is that complainants are no longer entitled to legal costs associated with the filing of the complaint. That was a major case, a major decision.
So you can imagine just back to the question about the vagaries, if I can put it that way, of the complaint process. For an individual to have to file a complaint with all the complexity associated with that and then not be able to recover or recoup their legals costs in a case that in some cases, as we've said, has gone on for decades, is somewhat Herculean. That for us is another reason why that proactive model is so important. It doesn't impose onerous obligations on any of the parties.