I support that kind of direction. I've made this point clear, I think, in other venues that temporary foreign worker programs make a lot of sense in booming regions of a country, where you might have to see very large wage increases in order to attract workers from the less successful regions.
Especially with something that might be related to a commodity cycle where the boom might not last forever, do you really want to attract a bunch of people across the country who might have to go back again to communities that have been hurt?
I do support a limited temporary foreign worker program. I like the idea of focusing it on more skilled and educated people, because I think the supply responses are smaller there, because you might have to wait until someone finishes their training before they can really enter that area. Targeting it at regions of the country that are booming makes sense.