It's $109 million. We're doing that, as I said, to address the 60% who are in the skilled worker class. Sixty percent of the applications--round numbers--are skilled workers. Of that group, 80% are their families; only about 20% are workers themselves. So over 80%, close to 90%, of people who are in the backlog are not the targeted skilled workers.
We've already made progress on reuniting families. We've improved processing times over your government by up to 40%, because we are making families a priority as a government. We've done that in a number of fields. I was the minister who brought in the universal child care benefit, as an example. We do have a priority on family reunification. And yes, you're right, if at a future point in time we decide that is the priority, they could be fast-tracked, just like any of the worker categories.