If I could reflect on that, it's a good question, Mr. Dewar.
If it's 20% of the whole system, this year our costs are a shade over $83 million, so 20% would be quite a bit more than that. It's not just the cost; it's the difficulty in maintaining the accuracy of the records, especially when you're dealing with the types of firearms that we're talking about, which exist mainly in rural communities, farms--firearms that have been passed down for years, decades, if not longer. Investing in a system that is inaccurate when the money could be more properly invested in programs for youth at risk, for instance, or gang activity, focusing on crime with handguns, where a substantial part of firearm crime happens--