Yes. It's not so much maritime surveillance. That remains extant with the navies and the coast guards of both nations, right down to constabulary elements at various ports up and down the coasts.
The part that's been federally mandated for NORAD is the role of maritime warning. That has been one that NORAD has had for about six years, and it's had to grow into this new set of shoes because it's one that was carried out by others before.
What is now quite successfully being done at NORAD...they have a common operating picture that's fed by some of these agencies I spoke to, which gives NORAD the ability to assess the entire picture, with intelligence coming from the FBI, the CIA, the RCMP, CSIS, and others, and then bring that warning to the decision-makers of both nations. There has been a very successful acceptance of a role. NORAD was ready to accept it immediately, but I think it was based on the acceptance by others to provide NORAD the tools to carry out that role.