Overall, we accept far more applications than we refuse, so right away, you're only seeing a small percentage of those applicants, for either permanent immigration or temporary immigration. When that's all you see, that skews the perspective, and it seems that we spend our days saying no. We actually don't.
The other processes that we try to put into place are to beef up our call centre so that somebody is answering the telephone when the clients call and they can get information directly from a voice, instead of in an ATIP request when you do it online and you don't actually speak to anybody. Actually, we also have, as I think you know, a special phone line for members of Parliament to help with this, so that constituency offices can call in directly or email directly.
We've actually spent a lot of time over the last few months looking at how we can funnel all of the calls or emails, all of the client service approach, into one part of the department, so that we will have cohesion and consistency across the approach, by phone, or by email, or through ATIP, and as well so that people are getting the same responses, because we also find that there's some “answer-shopping”. If I try phoning, do an ATIP, and then if I get a lawyer, maybe I can get a different answer. Ideally, again, to come back to it, the more we can put out there up front, the more time it will save all of us later.
But some people just won't be happy, right? They got denied a visa.