You actually make the point that the temporary foreign worker system is a revolving door and it's not serving industry right. That's one of the reasons that changes are imminent. For the agricultural low-skilled side.... There are three separate entry points for temporary foreign workers, as well as the express entry points for the provinces and provincial nominee programs in which you can pick up skills. Your father came with shipbuilding skills. Those are still out there and still available.
Now we've actually changed the queue so that the province of record can go into those 800,000 names that the Liberal legacy left us and they can pick out welders and pull them to the front of the queue. We used to have to take them in order, but we made changes so that's no longer the premise.
We're in negotiations with the provinces now as to how we expand—and I'm talking numbers of people—on the express entry and on the provincial nominee programs in order for the provinces to recognize what they need and to bring those people in. It's less prescriptive and it's far less arbitrary than it was before. In the mid-term and long-term, you'll end up with exactly what you're asking for. But to begin to make the changes, you have to stop doing what you're doing.
That was the beginning of the changes to the temporary foreign worker program. The low-skilled numbers have been held for agriculture. We've added a couple of other entries to what we consider low-skilled. At the same time, we're working with the provinces to develop the skill sets that will be required for the agricultural industry going forward, because agriculture today is not what it was five years ago, 10 years ago, or 20 years ago.