Clearly, additional resources or additional incentives for others to invest would be beneficial.
The data are Canada Border Services Agency data, not ours, and the reports are monitored fairly closely. Additional resources of $800,000 present a good start. We believe that if this funding were sustainable, as opposed to one-time incremental, we would be able to enhance our activities on intelligence, on investigation, and on the strategies to stem the tide.
Those are the types of approaches that other leading nations in anti-doping are taking, through collaboration with law enforcement, through collaboration with their border services agencies, and through the sharing of information that allows for a much more effective use of the scarce resources in an agency such as ours. So without access to any of the information that exists, we're left to use these resources as best we can.