I agree with you, Ms. Fry. We have concerns, too. We have concerns that the necessity of trade means that with the FAST card, it is illegal in Canada--it is unconstitutional--for people to voluntarily pee in a jar for a drug test, unless you're a driver that goes to the States, under voluntary rules. Nobody's worried about that. Nobody's worried about all the different processes that don't have appeals. For years this has been going on. Workers' rights have been violated. Our constitutional rights have been violated. At the end of the day, this is the only thing we have seen that we can at least say is going to give some kind of redress.
I also think members of Parliament should be looking at the questions they ask. You should ask for a security briefing, look at the questions they ask, and ask yourself whether or not those questions.... Again, I can't discuss it, because it's a security issue. We've gone over it inside doors, and we're not supposed to talk about it in public, and I won't because I respect the security process. Ask the security experts to give you a briefing to explain why they ask all of those questions, and decide whether you think they're okay too.
I agree with you. Politicians and people should be standing up and looking at these issues and finding out whether or not they are absolutely required or not, and what we can do about them.
As for people agreeing with us, pilots have transport security clearances. They fly to Ronald Reagan Airport. They fly to Berlin. They fly to Heathrow. They fly all over the world. It's a similar process, a similar piece of paper. If it's good enough to fly a plane, I don't think they're going to give you a hard time driving a tank-haul of chlorine across the border.
But I do think this is quite serious. It was a very good question; I'm glad you posed it. It's something that parliamentarians should be looking at, and I do thank you for it.