I certainly think we have a very diversified economy here. We range from IT to pharmaceutical, bioscience, marine technologies, and aerospace. It's a very broad and diverse economy for such a small jurisdiction, and we certainly need a skilled labour force for a lot of those jobs.
A lot of where that diversity comes from, in pharmaceuticals, etc., certainly needs a skill set, and those industries are growing. That's what has enabled Prince Edward Island to show, for a small jurisdiction, a strong economy. We don't see the rises you see in Alberta, in oil-producing provinces, but we don't see the lows either. We've been fortunate enough in our economy to have a steady economy, steady and slow. We always continue to move, but we do need the skill sets for those types of jobs, and we want those people to stay here through the immigration process.
In some of our other industries, within our tourism industry, our processing plants and fisheries, and our agriculture industries, there is a requirement there. We need workers that we necessarily don't need all year round, but we do need to have a program that will allow those temporary foreign workers to come in as well.