Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'll use the remainder of my time with Airsoft in Canada. This is the one time we have you before our committee.
When the committee was suspended, we were having a conversation about what the U.K. has used. You mentioned two tiers of airsoft. Some are, I guess, translucent and obviously don't look like a real firearm, and then there's a more professional class. In other jurisdictions, I think California might require an orange tip on the end of the barrel.
When it comes to the appearance, I know that a lot of people in the sport have spent a lot of money on airsoft guns that really do look like the real thing. That's very important to industries like the film industry, where they want to use a replica to re-enact a historical scene, as an example.
I guess this could happen through regulations, but have you fleshed out anything on the topic of how we could modify their appearance even when the airsoft guns are in transport so that it's quite obvious what it is when you're carrying it? Maybe it has an orange tip on it so that it could not be mistaken for something else when you're going from your place of residence to where you're engaging in the sport.
Is there anything you can add to that conversation ?