On that front, I'm going to leave Medric's personal take on all of that to him.
As co-chair of the committee, I can tell you that where we fell down was not in the standard in and of itself, but how it was going to be administered. The policy piece is what scared people. The standard was one thing, but they were afraid of how it was going to be built into legislation and policy, and how that would impact the lives of the users and perhaps infringe on their human rights.
It was not the CGSB's job to develop the policy pieces and the regulatory pieces. There was no direct answer to those questions, which made people even more fearful of the process moving forward.