Often ministers and the department have said that the private sponsorship program is in jeopardy because there are too many non-eligible people applying, with the implication that somehow people are using it as a back door for family sponsorship. In fact, there's a discussion document that I think the refugee branch of the department produced that identifies what the department thinks are some of the problems, such as sponsors not being aligned to comprehensive solutions of the international community; attempts to use the private sponsorship for refugee programs to address non-refugee humanitarian issues like poverty, lack of economic or educational opportunities; that sponsors lack expertise in refugee identification.
Are any of those three issues addressed in training or meetings with the sponsorship agreement holders? If so, and we still get this increasing number of ineligible people, does that indicate a lack of training, a lack of comprehension of the program, or is it just wilful on the part of sponsors to flood the system?