I'm going to say that the argument of persuasion is fairness. It's simply put this way.
The first panellist asked me whether I couldn't just go and organize these people. Yes, I want to. In fact, that's what I do. I am the lead organizer for the province for the Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. So when I say these people, our temporary foreign workers, are afraid to organize because they're afraid of being sent back to their home country prematurely, it is a fact.
Please, whatever legislation is put in place, do not put us at a disadvantage for organizing these people. They must have multiple employers. Second, please do not use temporary foreign workers as leverage against Canadian workers. If Canadian workers are not filling a set of jobs because they will not work under those conditions or for those wages, please do not use temporary foreign workers as a way to leverage Canadians to work for lower standards and lower conditions.
Temporary foreign workers and immigrants coming to Canada should be treated as Canadians. They should have the same abilities to get work. They should be treated the same under the law, and they should have the ability to organize into local unions if that's what they desire. That's only fair. I think everyone in this room, and in Canada in general, agrees that fairness--looking at our laws, if we take them into account from a position of fairness--is what we should build our laws and our legislation on.