Thank you very much to all of the witnesses.
Dr. Chagla, I enjoy listening to you on the CBC. Thank you for your service.
Mayor Diodati, I appreciated being in your jurisdiction for our caucus meetings this summer.
I'm going to direct my first question to Mr. Boudreau.
What I thought was interesting is the exercise you took us through about Vancouver in 2005 and the challenges you faced. Working with government authorities, you came up with a workaround, which produced the kiosks with which we are now very familiar. You're analogizing where we are with ArriveCAN to the introduction of the kiosks about 14 years ago, by my account.
Can you pick up on something you said about working with airports and how we work with the airlines going forward? Just touch upon this, and I'll get to Ms. Pasher as well.
If ArriveCAN now has this advance declaration option, and it speeds up processing times by up to 50% for people who choose to use it, how do we make sure that enough people are aware of that feature and aware of the time savings it represents? How do we give them the ability to have it on their phones and access Wi-Fi or roaming when they're arriving?
One thing that I'm thinking about is the availability of Wi-Fi when you're on the tarmac. You could be doing that instead of filling out those old, cumbersome little five-by-seven forms that ask you about how much tobacco and alcohol you're bringing into the country. Do you have any thoughts on that?