The Canadian Transportation Agency recently received an additional $10 million in funding, if I recall the figure correctly. That would need to be verified. It is not a question of money, though. It is a question of how this money is being spent and whether the procedures and regulations are amenable to the efficient processing of complaints to begin with.
The other part is whether there are processes to ensure that for each complaint that is caught, there are 10 that are prevented by enforcement actions. That's an area where the Canadian Transportation Agency is sorely wanting.
We cannot have a police officer or an enforcement officer in each corner or at each airport. What we can do when violations are caught is have such severe financial consequences—like we have seen in the United States with a $7-million fine—that the airlines will think twice before they break the law.
Ultimately, the problem with the CTA is its lack of independence. We can give it as much money as we want, but it will still not be able to do justice. We know that the CTA sometimes has encrypted emails exchanged with Transport Canada behind the scenes. They are not adjudicating matters and dealing with matters in a fair manner.