I absolutely share your point of view. It is incredibly difficult to get your credentials recognized, and this is typically a provincial issue, but I know there has been some work at the federal labour market minister's level to try to bring some cohesion across the provinces on how we might work, not just within the province but so that we don't have separate credential recognition systems across 13 jurisdictions.
The chartered professional accountants, the CPAs, just came together. There used to be 36 different registration bodies across the country, and there are now 13, which is a great change, and it is consistent across the country.
I believe the federal government could play a strong role in coordinating the work of the provinces, encouraging a national standard, because imagine coming into the country and not even knowing where the registration body is located. Why is it different from one province to another? Then the larger issue is why is it different in Australia versus Canada?
This is a huge issue, and I do believe the federal government has a role to play in terms of bringing together the labour market ministers to actually encourage one system for each profession.