In that particular case, you need to give them a safety valve. You have to say that when you've sourced in your province and have sourced nationally and you have done it damn quickly and you can't get the people you need, we will allow you to bring in a specialist.
I agree that the temporary foreign worker project was getting out of control with respect to the number of people coming in on low-skilled jobs, and I think both the previous government and this one are attacking that problem with issues of worker knowledge—that you are able to find where the jobs are—and as you pointed to, with support for mobility to get people to go and to take them on.
I will say, though, that in the Chamber of Commerce—we have 200,000 businesses—the single most frequent issue raised with us by our membership is a lack of skilled workers. There is a good deal of fury among employers, who say, “I don't want to be told that I could find the people if I worked harder; I've done job fairs, I've posted advertising; I cannot find these people, and I can't do my business.”