To respond to that, first of all, you're going to have to come and pick cherries at my orchard someday, and I can assure you that you'll never use the word “unskilled” again. A person who can pick cherries--and some of my pickers make over $300 a day picking--is not unskilled, let me tell you. That's just a sidebar.
We're in and out. We need temporary workers. We're really at a four- to six-week season, and it's hard to attract a person seeking long-term employment. We are suggesting that rather than bringing in temporary workers, organized from the south or whatever, the immigration department could entertain that with the group of people who are travelling from around the world, the backpacker group. They have that youth hostel system. There are literally thousands of them in the country every summer, but at this moment it's illegal for them to take employment. What we're saying is that we might fit into that. The young groups from Europe or wherever they happen to come from throughout the world are in North America at the time that we need them, but today they can't legally come and work for us. Our suggestion is to have a look at that.
Other jurisdictions, specifically New Zealand and Tasmania, allow that to happen. A lot of my pickers actually travel there in the wintertime because they love picking fruit so much. I probably had a dozen in Australia last winter, and they're allowed to work legally under a temporary permit. We'd like to encourage an examination of that.