It's premature to say whether any of the 1,000 CBSA frontline officers will be deployed to security screening.
With a program like this, there's a constant tension between the timeliness of our answers and the time we need to take to do it right. We can typically do an easy, simple case in a couple of days; more complex cases may take more time. We're always looking at how we can improve our efficiency without sacrificing that effectiveness piece. If you look over the last couple of years, our productivity has actually gone up quite impressively. The challenge is that our volumes have gone up with it, so we haven't been able to keep up with the increasing volumes.
That doesn't mean we've given up. We're continuing to look at how we can achieve further efficiencies in the program. One thing, for example, is that about 50% of our current inventory of 195,000 are in-Canada asylum seekers, so we're looking at moving away from a first-in, first-out process to finding and identifying the simple, less complex cases so we can get them out of the inventory quicker. That does two things: It gets people decisions quicker, and it also reduces the volume in the inventory and allows our staff to work on the other cases.