Okay.
In my remaining time, I want to go to you, Professor Worswick.
I come from Alberta. I represent Edmonton—Leduc, which has areas like Nisku that are suffering from a real shortage of all types of labour. Just looking at your recommendation on the temporary foreign worker program going forward, if you look at the three prairie provinces—I'm going off memory here—I think for 2013 the unemployment rate for Saskatchewan was 4%, for Alberta it was about 4.6%, for Manitoba it was 5.5%, for Ontario and Quebec it was around 7.5% and 7.6%, and it was higher in Atlantic Canada. Obviously we have different regional realities in this country. We're facing a bigger challenge on the Prairies in terms of accessing labour.
Should we have a temporary foreign worker program that recognizes different regional realities and says that employers in regions where it's 4% unemployment ought to be perhaps facing a different reality from employers facing 11.5% unemployment?