As I mentioned earlier, there are two parts to FOSS. There is the use by our border services officers of GCMS for entering immigration data as they process immigrants as they show up at our ports of entry. That's been operational since last summer. We are tweaking that right now because we have some choke points, namely the large airports. We're tweaking the performance of GCMS to handle the volume before we switch FOSS off.
On the side of the CBSA, the information from GCMS will be made available and located in a high-performance database so that, at primary scan, your passport won't hit GCMS, which is not necessarily the right level of performance for our peak periods. It will hit our database on our servers. Those two pieces are actually developed and in operation right now. What we're working with operations on is the ability to terminate the use of FOSS as a crutch. It's been in use since the 1970s and, as we are about to pull it, there are some concerns whether the other systems can hold their own.