I'll try to tie it back to the question that was posed earlier. The question was whether granting status to people without status would be an attack on the integrity of the system. I would say the integrity of the system is being attacked by the system itself at this very moment.
We had a refugee board member recently charged with breach of trust. He was trying to date the refugee claimant who appeared before him. In that particular case the woman had the courage to come forward with the assistance of her boyfriend. There are so many other examples, maybe not of a similar nature, but where it cries out in terms of what exactly happens at these refugee hearings and why an increasing percentage of refugees are having their claims denied. That's why we need the refugee appeal division to correct these mistakes. It is not enough to have the refugee going through the Federal Court to seek judicial review--they don't even have a right to do that. It's desperately in need of correction, and that will seriously add to the integrity of the system.
The integrity is not taken away because there are some people who are not even standing in the queue, because the queue was never designed for them in the first place. Apart from that, I think we have to look at the appointment system as well. I know the government is now trying to recruit as many people as possible. We have a serious backlog both at the Refugee Appeal Board and the Immigration Appeal Board right now. Hearings are not being scheduled because there is no member. All these issues need to be tackled. Certainly RAD has to be put in place right away.