I hope I understand the question correctly and I apologize if I did not. Obviously, we already have the entry information. If a foreign national comes in by air, the person passes CBSA, so we have the entry information. What the system will now provide is the exit information, which is currently a gap. In most countries, in Europe and the United States, exit information is pretty systematically collected. Really what it helps us to establish is the travel history of the client. With the coming into force of this legislation, our colleagues at the border services agency will be able to collect this information at all entry and exit points, both at the land border and in the air mode.
Again, I hope I understood the question correctly.