I think I can address some of that, sir.
Currently within the Government of Canada, the highest-level overarching policy that governs how security is managed is the policy on government security set by the Treasury Board. That policy defines a number of aspects. Security screening is one of them, but it is built assuming that all of those aspects are there.
Currently, the policy on government security does not apply to parliamentarians. It applies to public servants, so the question of how a department would engage with an individual who's not subject to the policy on government security, even though they have a security clearance, is an unasked question. That would be new for us, and we would have to figure out how to deal with that at the time.