I think the tip line system is part of the tool box that we can use, but, of course, at the end of the day it is of little benefit for the actual migrant worker. Let's say if you're a migrant worker and you're being abused or your employer is not doing something right, you call this tip line. Okay. Presumably, some sort of inspection might happen or some follow-up will happen, so the employer will know or guess that somebody has been tipped off.
Often, what we see happen is that the employer will look around or think about ways to make sure there's silence on this. Of course, I'm not saying that all employers do this, just some unscrupulous employers whom we've seen at our clinic.
The tip line is not the same as, say, a provincial standards complaint. Let's say if I am not paid overtime or am owed unpaid wages, I can make a claim to the provincial ministry of labour and they'll follow through and, hopefully, I'll get what I'm due under the Employment Standards Act from that. But the tip line doesn't have that mechanism, obviously, so it puts employees as a group at risk. There's no benefit other than to make sure, from the government's point of view, that the employers are systemically aligning with that program. I would say that it's part of the tool box, but it's not perfect. It has to go with other things.