Thank you very much. That's an extremely important question for the profession at the moment.
What we had hoped to see as the provinces developed these guidelines was a much higher degree of consistency among the various approaches. There is a national body that represents them, but we've certainly seen a diversity of views and a diversity of policies being developed. As I said, some are slightly different, while some are very substantively different.
We're very clear on the fact that if this is left at the provincial level, we will have a patchwork. We already have a patchwork, as I said. It's no longer a theoretical concern. It exists in reality now, and our members are telling us about their concerns. I have phone calls every day from people saying, “I live in this province. I think I am going to move to that province because I like their rules better and they coincide better with my own moral views.” It is not a theoretical issue anymore.
Because of that, we certainly would look for a very rigorous federal approach to try to make sure that we do have consistency from province to province on some of these very difficult issues to resolve some of these uncertainties.