I think the most important concern for parliamentarians here, at this juncture, is that it's really important to incorporate human rights considerations into up-front planning of security regulation. The main reason for this is that by incorporating human rights concerns at the front end of designing security directive legislation, that will leave Parliament in control of those provisions.
If Parliament passes legislation that isn't attuned to what its human rights obligations possibly are, then there will almost certainly be legal challenges. Those matters will go to the courts, and then the courts will be in a position of deciding what the law is going to look like. So in issues such as the detention provisions in Bill C-4 and now Bill C-31, by taking the initiative and making human rights-attuned adjustments at this stage, Parliament has a better chance of being in control of what the outcome is.