I would just add as a point of clarification that the national sex offender registry database already exists, and there are 36,000 names in that database. There's a single national database for people who have been convicted of a designated offence and who are required to register.
In the provinces there are registration centres, as set out in the legislation that exists today under the Sex Offender Information Registration Act, to identify areas where offenders would go to report, register, and do their annual reporting in, as well as reporting any changes to their address, driver's licence, and that type of thing. They exist today. That's what populates and keeps the information in the NSOR database current, valid, and relevant. We can understand where offenders are, whether they've changed addresses, and those types of things. That information is also used to do queries to support investigations.