I will answer, if I may, Warden Markowski.
I think our tools are excellent tools. For example, our drug dog is an excellent tool, but a drug dog is not foolproof. A drug dog alerts on the scent of the drug, but it's not as if it can tell if a person has drugs on him. It depends on the type of drug, whether it's pharmaceutical or a THC product, and on how it's packaged. For 95% of our visitors who come in, it's most likely that the contraband is concealed in the body cavity. Well, how long has it been there? How much scent is emitting off of it?
Our tools aren't foolproof, but they're very, very good tools. Our ion scanner for testing visitors entering our institution is an excellent tool, but that tool is not going to tell me if the individual has drugs on him or herself. It's just going to tell me if the person has been in recent contact with drugs.
So, yes, I think there's a lot of technology out there. For example, at the Correctional Service of Canada, we don't utilize full-body walk-through scanners like you see at the airport. I think that would be an excellent tool, which we could utilize at our principal entrance. I've heard there's some controversy over it, that it may be too intrusive, but it works well at the airports and it would work well at our institutions.