This is where we're seeing the current plan being quite reactive and not particularly proactive.
Here in British Columbia, we have three million British Columbians who can't get a family doctor. Where is this going to leave us in the next 10 to 15 years as we start to see increased retirements, but we don't have the population growth to be able to fill those positions? Even if we did start having miraculous population growth right now, we're decades away from having it impact our labour market.
The health care and construction sectors are going to take a significant hit here. I know that there's been talk of prioritizing areas in the levels plan and that we would prioritize the health care sector in the 395,000 permanent residents that we're going to be welcoming in 2025. We also have 300,000 people in Canada who came on the CUAET visa from Ukraine who are going to be expecting permanent residency or pathways to permanent residency. We have a huge number of temporary residents—