We used to call that management by stress, where you just cut and cut and cut until something breaks and then you back it off a quarter turn and run it like that for a while. I can see that. I can sense that in the public service, but also as a member of Parliament.
A lot of frustrated Canadians who can't get the service they used to get through a well-funded and well-staffed public service end up at MPs' offices complaining. We have first-hand experience. My office is almost an immigration office as it is. When you talk about 140 more jobs cut at Sydney with immigration, they're going to be further frustrated having to wait five months to have a simple visitor's visa processed, etc, and they're going to miss their family's wedding, etc., as a result.
I think MPs here should be aware that some of the predictable consequences of these cutbacks are going to wind up at our office. The expectation of Canadians to reasonable service could in fact be compromised.
I think those are very helpful examples.
Also, Mr. Gordon, thank you for flagging this issue, but I predict the government has the public service pension plan in its crosshairs. I don't think it's paranoia to assume. I believe that the thin intellectual veneer has been put on this notion by the C.D. Howe Institute and by John Manley and his group of chief executive officers. They're trying to lay the foundation for the argument that we can no longer afford pension plans. I'm wondering what the public service unions are doing to inoculate themselves against this looming storm.