I don't see really any new effect. There's a whole area of law here. There are lawyers who specialize in this.
I'm the head of our association, but I also own an agency that historically, over the last 30 years, has been a vanguard agency in doing proactive security work. We've arrested over 65,000 people over the last 30 years. I know what's involved in the logistics of doing that. I know what the insurance premiums associated with doing that are, because sometimes you get sued. It's just a reality of life—it happens. Shopping centres get “slip and falls”; we get interpleaded with those things. They sue everybody—the cleaners, the security.
In my opinion, and in the opinion of our lawyers who do these cases, Bill C-26 won't have any major effect.
There are a lot of lawyers who are eager to take these cases against the security agencies. I don't think it's going to make it easier for them to do it, and I don't think it's going to make it more difficult; it's pretty much the same.