When it comes to CATSA, you are right. There is actually $197.6 million on this. I explained that earlier. Part of it is to prepare for the Olympics. Part of it is to do the business of CATSA.
Your question is absolutely appropriate. You're asking why we need that much more money just to do the business of CATSA on the basis of day-to-day-operations as well as to deal with some of the capital costs, including those for the new screening. It is because the base is actually too low. CATSA cannot operate on a budget of $134 million. That's what it is. It has to do with the fact that for the business we ask it to do, it needs a considerable amount more. That is something that has been looked at. It has a year-to-year budget allocation.
To this point, when it comes to what they're doing with the money, they are actually buying capital equipment. They are replacing some of the existing screeners, the older X-ray scanners. They are not the multi-view scanners, which we are now replacing those older ones with in the airports. It's so they can deal with this new equipment and deal with security in a much better way, in a much more accurate way, and in a way that is, let's say, competitive with other countries so that we do not become a weak link for security in our airports.
That's where the money is going and that's why it's going the way it is.