Ultimately, someone with a grievance would have recourse to legal proceedings, and that's, I guess, the ultimate protection.
I've had and have I think a very good working relationship with both the previous Secretary of Homeland Security and the current Secretary of Homeland Security. We are both determined that the experience at the border needs to be carefully monitored to determine if there are untoward circumstances that are happening, and before it would get to the point of somebody launching a legal action. Again, if you look at the experience of the last 60 years, that would not have happened very much, if at all.
Before you get to that kind of a situation, we need to have the kind of relationship where, if the U.S. has a problem with the way the Canadian system is operating, or if we have a problem with the way the American system is operating, we can simply communicate with each other and fix it. That's the kind of attitude that has built the kind of border that we presently enjoy, where it is the longest, non-militarized, most successful boundary relationship in the history of the world. Both sides dare not take that for granted. We both need to work at it to make sure that it continues to be safe, secure, efficient, and expeditious.