There is no doubt that the Canada Border Services Agency is working very hard to prepare for the 2010 Olympics and Paralympics. We have several things under way from the point of view of operational planning and making sure we have the right number of staff, making sure that our facilities are able to process the expected volumes of travellers and athletes that will be coming. We want to make sure that we have contingency plans for unfortunate environmental or security issues. We want to make sure that our staff are properly trained, and that probably relates more directly to the question that is being asked related to temporary resident permits and working with our colleagues at CIC.
We work extremely closely with our colleagues at CIC. As I think was mentioned earlier this afternoon, we are working on making sure that we have very clear and consistent policies and practices that are well known to all our staff. We have consistent dialogue with them, at both the national and the regional level. We have consultative committees on which we both sit to make sure that all our policies in fact are well understood and that we are working shoulder to shoulder as we move forward. That applies not only to the Olympics but certainly holistically to all the programs that we administer.
As for the question related to trafficking in particular, there is no doubt that over the last little while all management and staff at CBSA are very sensitive to this issue. Our officers are much more aware of the implications of this, and we try to make sure that they are looking for this.
Our primary responsibility from an immigration perspective at ports of entry is to determine admissibility to the country. For human trafficking as well as some other issues, that would probably unfold much more in an investigative and subsequent prosecutorial process, not so much at a port of entry.