Thank you, Ms. Chow.
On the first question of live-in caregivers, first of all, let me express my condolences and that of the government for the loss of Juana Tejada, whom I knew. She was a compassionate and courageous woman. We regret her loss, and we respect her fight.
I can tell you, Ms. Chow, that starting this spring, I intend to review ways in which we can improve the live-in caregiver program to ensure the appropriate protection of the rights of live-in caregivers and to ensure that the program works better. I intend to begin with community consultations in that respect, consulting with, amongst others, representatives of the Filipino community who have a particularly strong interest in the issue. I'm willing to give serious consideration to the principle behind what you characterize as the Tejada law. In this respect, we need to acknowledge that it's the provincial labour codes that govern the rights of workers. It's not entirely a matter of federal jurisdiction, but I'd be happy to work with you on this issue.
With respect to the global case management system, I'm sure this is a concern of every Minister of Immigration since this program began six or seven years ago. The Treasury Board has taken a series of very close looks at the program, has narrowed its focus, and has insisted on outside audits to ensure that the program is being administered efficiently.
I am persuaded that we need something like GCMS. We're operating in the 1960s, technologically speaking, which is one of the reasons we have such slow processing times, relatively speaking. We're dealing with masses of paper. I was just at our case processing centre in Vegreville on Friday. It is unbelievable what we are doing in terms of paper processing. We should be like other countries and operate electronically. I'll turn that over to the deputy for detailed comments on the spending with respect to GCMS.
Finally, on advertising, the supplementary budget for advertising we brought forward last time was for funds that had already been spent. The $3 million constitutes a transfer to CIC from the PCO advertising budget.
I'm out of time, I guess.