It's not quite that direct.
What the legislation provides is for us to share this information with CBSA. First of all, in particular for high-risk child sex offenders, we'll actually have detailed information for less than seven days. It allows us to share that with CBSA. It allows CBSA, on the return of the individual, to do some verification to see whether what they learn from that aligns with what the person provided before leaving. Our sharing information with foreign officials won't be done pro forma. It will be done on a case-by-case basis, when there is some reason to either advance an investigation or to prevent some kind of offence, keeping in mind things like ministerial directives on information sharing with foreign law enforcement, privacy issues, and depending on the country, what impact providing the information may cause.
That's generally how it would work. You'd have to have something specific to do more follow-up beyond sharing it with CBSA and doing verification of the data.