It's not all packages. Let's be clear about that. We're talking about the ones that are non-reported. There is a series of exemptions under the exporting goods regulations for those kinds of packages. These are the ones where the authority, prior to Bill C-21, did not exist to open them at random.
It goes back to the point I made earlier, that the starting point for efficient border management is risk assessment. We know that in the great majority of cases people who are exporting or sending packages abroad are doing it for legitimate purposes. You don't want your border services attempting to open or look at every package. You want them to be able to identify the ones that are likely to be in non-compliance. One of the fundamental ways you do that is by doing random checks from time to time, to see what you find when you look in a series of packages. Are there new types of risks, new types of configurations? If so, you can create a system, a mechanism to look for those indicators, those tags, and pick those packages to look at.