For one, we'll be able to hire more visa officers overseas. That's a good thing. It's just putting more volume in, which is what many here have suggested we do.
It will also help us fund systems and allow the centralizing of processing, because, quite frankly, it costs us less to have someone in this country do the processing than in many places offshore. We will be able to modernize our systems; some of our computer systems are ancient, by any standard. We have members of Parliament who are younger than some of our computer systems. So we need to take a giant leap forward—into the 1990s, in some cases.
We're also going to be coding files so that we can identify newcomers or applicants by their occupation, and by their province of destination, so that we can share that with the provincial nominee programs.
We're going to be doing a letter campaign to the oldest files, asking them if they'd like a refund if they've decided to get on with their lives, or whether they still want to come here. Hopefully, that will withdraw some people from the backlog as well.
So we're going to take a number of measures.