From the perspective of wait times, if the wait time is based on our annual levels exercise, it's not going to help us that much. What it will help us to do, though, is use our resources in a different way.
Because global case management will have more information in electronic form, it will permit us to see much more of the file than we presently can. Right now, in our CAIPS system, it's very biographical. There's not a lot of information. The global case management system will permit us to streamline how we share information with our partners for purposes of screening. It will also permit us, as we add any application component, to think about doing a front-end and a back-end office, which does a lot of the administrative things so that officers overseas can really be focused on quality assurance, fraud investigation, intelligence-gathering, and interviews, when required.
Right now we have many officers doing a lot of other things, such as supervising registries and that type of thing. We think that with GCMS being rolled out and with the addition of the application that will then come, we will be able to refocus our resources so that our officers overseas will do value-added work, while we will do more of the back end and front end in Canada.