We have to go into what lookouts are. There are different categories of lookouts. My colleague Mr. McRoberts, from the Auditor General's office, is referring to the FOSS system. The FOSS system is a database managed by the Department of Citizenship and Immigration that has information about people who at one point or another tried to become a permanent resident in Canada or came to Canada and obtained a visa from overseas. I shouldn't use a number, but it's probably 160,000 names, a huge database of people, with all kinds of information.
The lookout system that we have in place and that we want our officers to focus on is not an old database. It's something that is regularly updated. We regularly put in our system a list of people, a much smaller list of people who we as an organization want to stop. It's a lookout. Beware. This person is coming in, or we believe there is a reason for that to occur, so beware. And every morning, people on the front line have discussions and are made aware of that critical thing.
So that focus is important. When we say the system is telling us that we should stop someone, then we go to the broader universe. Yes, we have information in the database on very many people, but they may not be at the level of concern that we would have in our own lookout system.