It can't be photo radar—and we've made a lot of presentations, even in Quebec—because you have to be careful with the Jean-Marie de Koninck report.
Police associations in Quebec did express their concerns about photo radar, how it seems to be the panacea for certain people, but it's not, because those people are not arrested or stopped right away. You could have a snapshot of somebody who we think would be drunk, but there's nobody there to arrest the person. So I'd be careful there.
There's one other thing I would like to add. We were talking about random testing. The other thing is, and it is a known fact, if you get involved in an accident and you had a couple of drinks, and you rush home as soon as possible, leave the scene, and call the police station right away, they won't accuse you of leaving the scene of an accident. You panicked, you went home, you had a shot and called the police station; you didn't want to avoid responding to the action you were involved in.
That is the best way to trick the system. You leave, you call the police station, you get a couple of drinks, and then where's the proof? How can we bring you back to the police station and say, okay, you're going to have a Breathalyzer test? It's done. It's a known fact.