It is a two-phase process, as it is, say, for our strategic environmental assessment. I would go back to my remarks that there are two types of proposals we look at. One would be a proposal coming from another minister or department, where a GBA is performed by that responsible department. In the second case, where the proposal is developed within the department, we would do a preliminary scan, and then we would make the determination whether to move on to a full one. I don't know what the breakdown is, but I am fairly certain that the majority of cases fall into the category of a preliminary scan rather than a full GBA.
We deal with a very wide range of issues. Every year, we brief the minister on hundreds of issues. As you say, some of them may be less obvious and still have a gender consideration. From our perspective, it is fairly clear that there are pieces of information that the minister would require to make a decision. Gender would be one, in certain cases, but also education and income levels. Those are fairly obvious and probably more specific to, say, our tax policy area, where the implications in many cases are for particular individuals and groups of individuals. It would be more frequent that we have in-depth gender-based analysis for that.