The employers are paying for the ones we've dealt with. I hate to relate it to something like a very enhanced passport application. People slam me for that, saying that's too simple, and it is. In one particular field, I think over 1,000 members ran through the program, with three kick-outs. At the end of the day, there were just two rejections.
Just so we understand, in the air world they've been doing this for years. Tens and tens of thousands of people in the air world have to go through security clearances now. At least they're dealt with in Canada. We have tens of thousands of truckers who have to give their information to the United States, to which our Privacy Act does not apply, to which our constitutional rights do not apply—to which a right of appeal applies.
We have much more faith in the Canadian government, in you as parliamentarians, to review those things than we do in the Homeland Security in the United States. I'm not slamming our good friends in America at all, but we have much more faith that you will deal with it in a much more appropriate light.
For instance, if there are sensitive questions raised, we know we can come here and talk to you about them, but we know we can't go and talk to Homeland Security and have any redress. We trust our courts better than we trust Homeland Security at the border.