That's a very good question. The code of conduct didn't exist until a few years ago. I have to thank former minister Duncan, because she really is the one who worked with the community to have this code adopted.
Before, if an athlete wanted to say this was wrong, they had no place to point it out, because there was no written rule for the sport. Now the code of conduct exists.
Your question is about how we enforce it, right? That's why, as a condition to be a member of OSIC, you have to have the code as one of your policies. You have no choice. You have to have the code as your policy.
What will happen now is that OSIC will be able to hear a complaint about that but also do proactive environmental studies, so it doesn't have to wait for a complaint. It has another line of business. Now it can also say, “I think something is wrong there. We will do an environmental assessment of this particular sport.” It can then look and make recommendations as to how the code is enforced.
If it found, for example, that nobody knows about the code, that nobody's checking about the code, then it can make recommendations. Then they will have to comply with it—