CATSA is actually doing a very good job of keeping our passengers safe.
There are two pockets of money, for a total, as you said, of $197.6 million. The first and smaller pocket is $6.9 million. It's the re-profiling of the 2008-09 fiscal year capital funding. It will go into the expansion of Calgary airport's hold bag screening, which was behind schedule. It also completes the purchase of the portable screening units at the Olympics and expands restricted identification cards. That's where that pocket of money goes.
The larger pocket of money, $190.7 million, is to carry out the screening obligations that are provided in the 2009 capital plan. It includes replacing a lot of the old X-ray scanners by a multi-view scanner. That's one of our problems: we have these older technologies. The new advanced technologies will allow much more vivid identification in the handbag screening process.
That's where we're going. We're keeping our Olympics about the athletes, as the first thing, and then making sure that the rest of the country keeps up to standards that are changing as we speak in the U.S., Europe, and other countries, so that we don't become a weak link.