Again, I can't really speak to other legislation.
The item we raised in the audit was that at the general level there are restrictions on the export of certain items. What we would expect is that the Canada Border Services Agency, or any other government organization involved in that, would make sure that any restrictions on exporting things would be respected.
In terms of something like the export of marijuana, obviously it depends on what the export rules or export restrictions would be on marijuana in the future—how those might or might not change. In the period of time that we looked at, obviously the exportation of illegal drugs was something that was not allowed and should be managed and controlled at the border.
However, what we found, again, was that the agency felt—and primarily because they didn't have the ability to do the random inspections of the non-reported shipments—that they didn't have the authority to systematically identify where there may be some exports of illegal drugs.
Again, fundamentally, the issue is always whether there are things that are restricted under Canadian law and regulation to export and if there are, how the government organizations are making sure those export restrictions are being respected.