It weighs on us fundamentally and heavily and significantly. I think your opening question set forth the competing objectives in this space. There's respect for the charter. There's effectiveness in terms of safety and security of Canadians. Then there's the appropriate burden in both the private sector and public sector, the appropriate resourcing.
In terms of compliance with the charter, we have structured the regime from its initial stages to put in place this division in terms of what FINTRAC receives in terms of its information. Then there's the fact that it doesn't do investigations but rather passes the information, once it meets a reasonable threshold, to law enforcement agencies, such as CRA and others, that have the appropriate warrant powers and safeguards in their own space to make sure that Canadians' information is being used appropriately.