As I mentioned in the opening remarks, the proposed legislation is very well aligned with what we already have in place. At the CER, we already have a robust regulatory framework that involves inspection officers, inspection officer orders, the issuing of non-compliances, the use of administrative monetary penalties, and the conduct of inspections. Companies are already well familiar with the need to have cybersecurity programs in place in order to detect and prevent the threats.
In terms of the overall impact on the CER-regulated industry in terms of cost, I think that some of that detail needs to be determined through the development of regulations, which have not yet been developed or proposed. With regard to the other part of it, I would point to the fact that what the bill is proposing is, in large part, a formalization of the powers and the oversight framework that we have in place, but extending it further so that it formalizes, as Mr. Finley noted earlier, the reporting relationships, the information gathering and the sharing of that on the government side.