Perhaps I can follow up on Lew's comments and your additional question there.
We do work together. We all work together for the common good. Our goal is to make the border efficient and safe. We have to remember security. You can never question security. I was an OPP officer for 20 years, so I know that, but it's how we can facilitate trade and commerce while respecting the goals of both CBSA and CBP.
It's not inefficient that we're all separate border operators, because we all have the same goal. Being all one wouldn't make a difference, but we do recognize that there are so many. I say, when you work at the border, everything is times two.
We had a mentally ill person who had threatened to jump off our bridge this morning. There were some 50 cruisers there. You had everything times two, all the Canadian responders, all the U.S. responders there, and everybody working together to do it. It's a very complex place. We realize that there are these external stakeholders that affect the border, which is a very complicated place.
That's why we have the Bridge and Tunnel Operators Association. Many of us belong to what's called the Can/Am Border Trade Alliance, which you must have heard of. That's border operators. That's customs on both sides. It's brokers. It's trucking. It brings together the whole border community together to work on solutions that we can bring forward to the government.
There's the transportation border working group, which is Transport Canada and the Federal Highway Administration. We belong to that and meet there. There's the Border Trade Alliance. Every acronym in the book, we belong to, to try to get with the right people and make the border work better.
There are acts of Congress. For the Ambassador Bridge, the Canadian Transit Company was incorporated through an act of Parliament in 1927. I don't think that all the governance models being different has any effect on how we do our work. We all work together, because if I can come up with an idea that makes my bridge work better, it helps Ron at his, and as we heard earlier from Ken, at his. We truly all work together with one common goal.