I'll say that with the more than 100 million interactions with Canadians that our officers have every year, we don't speak to the minister before each of them. It would be impossible and unnecessary.
I think you are referring to two incidents that were in the paper everywhere during that period, I believe last year—two incidents in which our organization was blamed for going to schools.
You describe it as our officers going into classrooms, but that's not the case; it's not factual. We didn't go into classrooms.
In one of the incidents, where we were trying to locate an individual, indeed one of our officers went to the principal's office to check the record, to be able to identify the location of a person whose child was at that school.
In the other incident, the mother of the child involved asked us to take her there to get the child out of school so that he would be with her at the end of the day, as she had been arrested. Those are the two occasions.
Following that, we changed our procedure to ensure that our officers would not go to schools unless it was a matter of national security and with the approval of a senior manager at headquarters.
I think the right thing was done on those occasions after this.