Yes, I do. We delivered ArriveCAN in all its complexity.
Without ArriveCAN and still using paper.... Different quotes were named. Mr. MacDonald said three dollars. I'll buy that number. Take 30 million successful submissions at ArriveCAN and multiply it. I think the math explains itself, in terms of $54 million versus paper. That's a one-to-one calculation.
There are other impacts of using paper. Paper takes time, around seven days, to digitize. Once a traveller comes in and submits a piece of paper, it would take up to seven days for that electronic information—which is usually error-prone, because it's handwritten—to get the facts and do the necessary public health measures, to do follow-ups or contact tracing, or to make sure that people are staying home if they need to.
There's the direct cost of replacing paper and all of the benefits of having real-time, immediate electronic information.
In addition—