Thank you, Chair and member, for the question.
I must say that right from the onset of our preparation of our response at the border, our officers' personal health in the performance of their duties on a day-to-day basis was front and centre in all of our preparation, in everything from making sure they had sufficient personal protective equipment on. Since that time, we've moved into providing shelter from some travellers by using plexiglass, and we've instituted sanitization chambers so that their tools can all be sanitized at the end of their work day. It's been an ongoing effort to ensure their safety.
As for how the work has changed, I must say that commercially, the truck traffic and the commercial cargo entering the country have actually surpassed pre-pandemic levels, and so we've been successful in ensuring that economic activity and trade have continued throughout the pandemic, notwithstanding that there was an immediate lull through the March to June period of last year.
As it pertains to dealing with travellers, clearly we've trained them on understanding the new legislation as it passed through the OICs for its application. We've continued to support them in many ways. They have 24-7 access now to our border task force, which provides them with policy advice on the application of the legislation. Also, we've ensured that they have all of the latest information on what is transpiring as their work has shifted. They've been briefed by local health authorities, certainly at the onset, about what COVID was and what protective measures they could take, so that they could continue to come through and report to work.
We're extremely proud of the professionalism of the men and women of the CBSA and of all frontline workers, who continued to come to work on a daily basis, making sure that the borders are secure.