Mr. Chairman, I think you have to go back to the beginning about why this rule was put in place in the first place.
There was work done by the 9/11 commission. That commission came out with decisions that called for the repatriation of the no-fly lists from the hands of the air carriers into the hands of the U.S. government, because up until that point air carriers around the world were running the U.S. no-fly list, making a determination as to whether individuals who potentially would be boarding that aircraft would be on the list or not, and then trying to resolve the situation if there was potentially a match with the U.S. government. This led to various people missing planes, false positives, and that sort of thing, so there was a decision on the part of the U.S. government to accept the recommendations of the 9/11 commission and repatriate the no-fly list into the hands of the U.S. government.
They went through their process to develop the final rule. There was a notice of proposed rule-making that came out. It provided people with an opportunity to offer representation around the content of that rule. Canada did do that. We had various discussions with the U.S. government about seeking an exemption to the application of the rule. The decision at the end of the day was to provide an exemption for Canadian domestic flights, i.e., flights that fly within Canada but fly over U.S. airspace.
Further to 9/11, as individuals will recall, it was airplanes that flew into the World Trade Centre. The U.S. government was very concerned about that sort of activity happening again. The rule applies to the continental U.S. They worry about having planes that fly over major population centres, but domestic flights in southern Canada that go over the northern United States do not fly over major population centres. This is one of the reasons they gave us the exemption for Canadian domestic flights--