Mr. Chair, with respect to capacity at our training facility at Depot, there are still a number of building projects ongoing, but as I indicated in response to an earlier answer, we have expanded facilities that are able to take on larger numbers of recruits.
I was at Depot in Regina a couple of months or so ago. I opened a new 25-metre range, and we turned the sod.... I guess it was more than a couple of months ago, because the snow hadn't flown in Saskatchewan yet. We turned the sod on a new mess hall. We have put in place temporary accommodations for an expanded number of cadets; those are a sort of trailer. So building is ongoing, but we have already expanded our capacity.
I might also indicate that we have also expanded capacity with respect to our ability to provide diverse training to cadets. We do a lot of scenario-based training. A cadet, in the course of 24 weeks, will live through and work through over 100 scenarios. We've increased our physical infrastructure as well to enhance that kind of training.
On the matter of what you refer to as investigative techniques, I would say that it continues to be an impediment that many of the modern means of communication are either not interceptible or are difficult to intercept. We'll apply to a judge, get a warrant, and then we'll go to a service provider and find that there's no easy way for us to actually carry out the investigation that's been authorized by the court.
We are certainly supportive of legislative amendments that would see suppliers, when they're making changes to their equipment, provide for the ability to intercept when it is authorized.