I'd be glad to.
Until just recently, Canada has always set its own accounting and auditing standards through the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants. There are boards that develop these standards. The decision has been made to move to international auditing standards. That will come into effect in 2010. So modifications will have to be made to our methodology. In fact, we are holding the first pilot training course today. We will have to train all of our staff in these new standards and adapt all of our manuals, guides, and everything to the new standards. The differences are not enormous, but there are some pretty significant differences that have to be taken into account.
On the accounting standards, it's largely the same thing for publicly accountable enterprises, which would include crown corporations, for example. Canada has also gone to international financial reporting standards, IFRS, which will be coming into effect in 2011. There are some significant challenges there for the preparers of the financial statements as well as the auditors, because there are changes there.
Again, we have to go through and identify what the differences are, train our people--which we've already started--and put those differences into our audit program so we pick them up. There is a lot of work that has to be done. Some of it has started already, but it has to continue over the next year.