Thanks for your question. I can speak to that from the immigration perspective in particular.
From an immigration perspective, as the committee would know, we were just here a couple of weeks ago on Bill S-8. There is a legislative gap on the inadmissibility side of the sanctions provision. Sanctions issued for breach of peace and international security do not trigger inadmissibility today. If Bill S-8 were to receive royal assent, it would trigger inadmissibility. Similarly with respect to entities, that's also a gap that would be closed if Bill S-8 received royal assent, which aligns with a recommendation from Parliament in a 2017 report.
If I may just take a moment to address the interdepartmental coordination aspect, from an immigration perspective, as found in IRPA, the policy responsibility for inadmissibility due to sanctions rests with the Minister of Public Safety. It's the CBSA that will do interdepartmental coordination with GAC. We consult on the development of the regulations, and then we ensure that our systems with the immigration department are updated to ensure that lookouts are entered for people who are inadmissible so that we are all able to effectively enforce those provisions on the immigration side.