Yes. To be clear, the new processes for improving the filing will, we believe, be an improvement. But it's not that the current system, at least in terms of our collating information, failed to achieve its desired purpose. Right now we have, in the old technical bill, about 100 comfort letters, plus or minus, in what was Bill C-10. We have another 100 or so comfort letters, which represent 200 or 300 pages of material, in a binder, sitting back in the office. Actually, there are several copies. They are kept track of. We can move to an electronic recording of them, but the information is there. The other information, the other 200, let's say, technical amendments, are those, as I said before, that have been identified by officials within the department. They need to be vetted, and they need to go through the approval process. But that information is there.
We can improve that. We can improve searchability and accessibility through the use of an electronic database. But as someone centrally involved with this, I would say that in terms of amassing the information, I think we largely have that now.