Yes, I certainly do. I do see value in that.
I take exception, I think, to the idea that we have enough staff to handle 250,000 immigrants a year, because they do other things as well. I don't think they do have....
That's not a problem with the sponsored parents and grandparents, as such, because most of them are at an age where we're not too concerned about security or criminality. But some of the younger ones are a problem, and they should be interviewed. Even in the older days, we didn't always interview all the parents, but if there's a 45-year-old parent with four or five children coming, I think it's worthwhile interviewing to make sure that they are indeed who they claim to be and so on and so forth.
I agree, the mix is extremely important. But I go back to my point that the numbers are too high. They're simply too high. And the federal government, as Richard has pointed out, has almost nothing to say about it.