Yes, we are looking broadly for best practices and standards. There are national and international standards, and those are being incorporated.
I would ask you to keep in mind that the unique training process that border officers have gone through up to this point include not only arrests but, for instance--and again it's very limited--if you have to use force of some kind, if you have to use pepper spray, if you have to use a baton. So that continuum is being taught. This is one more, albeit serious, extension of that. It has to be consistent with the standards they're already operating under.
But they do cast widely in terms of other jurisdictions and how it's done. We want to make sure our border officers are recognized as the best in the world, as in some ways they are now. In fact there's interest in places like Afghanistan, where there are border issues and how you can have increased expertise.