Thank you, MP, for that question. It is an excellent question. We can talk about temporary foreign workers specifically, but writ large, I think this comes back to the importance of labour market information.
When you talk about immigration levels in the country, about how many immigrants we should let in and in what professions, we need that information to drive this, not only from a professional point of view but also from a regional or geographical point of view as well.
We have pillars of recommendations. The first one is the continued devolution of the immigration selection process in this country, recognizing that it's a federal jurisdiction. It's a process that started with the provincial nominee programs, headed to Atlantic Canada with the Atlantic immigration program, and now includes these pilots, the rural and northern immigration pilots. For communities by communities is really the way forward.
I heard comments earlier about not only rural areas but even populous areas outside of those three or six centres that can use the help. The issue right now in this country is that we.... The labour shortage isn't discriminating. It isn't discriminating by region or geography or profession. We need all workers across the board everywhere. This is multistream. We need to look at immigration. We need to look at.... This is an opportunity. Let's start thinking like we haven't before. Let's put labour, business and government in a room and have these discussions and see what this looks like. It is going to take those who are long-term unemployed and unemployed and underutilized as well.
This a real opportunity, but what drives this is data and information, and this is the first step that we need going forward.