Again, there is always a balance in every system.
Parliament has to establish the requirements: what is it that Parliament wants to be controlled at the border, and what are those measures? Once those measures are established, there has to be a way of making sure the organizations that are having to enforce it have the resources to enforce it.
I don't know how many resources it would take for the CBSA, Canada Post, or whoever to make sure there is a reasonable assurance—it's never going to be perfect—that most packages coming across the border, through the mail for example, over $20 that should be charged duty are, in fact, being charged duty.
In establishing a system, there also needs to be appropriate consideration of the resource side of actually enforcing that system. In some of this, my opinion is that there may have been a bit of an unbalance in that. Again, that's not on things like the supply-managed and checking the volumes, because that is something we felt they could actually do and could improve on, and we've heard today that they've made some improvements in that. In terms of some of the other aspects of the system, though, and I'm particularly thinking of the de minimis, there needs to be a consideration of.... It's not good enough to say that this is going to be the system, if that system can't actually be enforced.