On the issue of irregular migration, we've been seized with this issue from the very beginning. We work very closely with the provinces of Quebec, Ontario, and Manitoba, and any other province that's affected by this. We have an intergovernmental task force on irregular migration that meets frequently. We have a very vigorous and strong outreach program by members of Parliament, and also by our Canadian embassy in the United States, as well as our 12 consulates all over the United States. In addition to that, we have ensured as a government that each and every individual who irregularly crosses our border is apprehended, arrested, and undergoes very rigorous criminal, health, and background checks. If anybody presents a threat to Canadian society, they are immediately detained. They don't actually get to make a claim.
As for what we're doing beyond that, as I said we have been working very closely with the provinces to ensure that the federal government is responsive to their concerns with about the effects that asylum seekers would have on their provincial social services, but our priority remains working very closely with the United States on outreach, on addressing issues related to the border. That work continues to be expressed in various different ways, from outreach to interdiction, to providing the necessary resources for more border security operations, to more money for the Immigration and Refugee Board.