I think one of the things about the temporary foreign worker program is that a number of the issues it has to deal with are also perhaps issues that are not of the direct making of the program necessarily. I don't know about the processing of the visas. That is not what we looked at, but certainly there was an issue of people being on EI.
I think we say in the audit report that Canadians who were working in the fish plant, quite frankly, wanted to be laid off and on EI for a certain part of the year, so that makes it difficult for the temporary foreign worker program. They were not matching up workers from under-represented groups to these jobs, so why are those workers in under-represented groups not prepared for the workforce to do those jobs?
There's the issue of their knowing they're at risk, that the program is being used more for family reunification than an actual job need. There are a number of things the temporary foreign worker program tries to deal with. Some of them are indications of issues that may exist in other programs, or broader programs.
Again, we did not look at the visa issue, but when you look at some of the problems that the temporary foreign worker is dealing with, some of them are also dealing with issues from other programs as well.