I am glad to follow up on that.
Yes, absolutely. My former director general, Michael Calcott—I was there at the time—made reference to the necessity to purchase an ATIP imaging system, which was for the ATIP office to be able to move from a paper-based environment to an electronic redaction process, so that our analysts were not literally still using a pink highlighter on a document, only then to run it through the old Canon photocopiers that removed the pink highlight. Those were our redactions. Our analysts have had the use of imaging since 2006, and it's a very efficient process.
What we're talking about now is the next generation. Currently we receive the bulk of the records that are subject to requests in hard copy. What we are trying to do is create that interface between my ATIP shop and the program areas; they can simply upload the relevant records in electronic form, so they are not having to take electronic records and put them in hard copy form, only for us to then scan them and put them back into an electronic form. It provides efficiencies that way. That is just one example of the functions of this new software.