I think amnesty is essential to deal with this problem. I don't think it should be time-connected.
I will tell you that of the illegal workers I have been working with, there are two groups. I met with one last night. He was brought here by a recruiter, assured that the paperwork was in order or would be shortly, and he has been working illegally. Now he's with a partner who's expecting a child. That child will suffer as a result of having an illegal father. The social problems abound. That's one group.
The other group are people who come here with all the documentation in place only to find no jobs, or they're laid off within a month and are on the streets. They're in critical situations very quickly.
There has to be a program dealing with those people, because as time goes on, there are more and more of them.
The recruiters? There are more and more of those recruiters bringing people in from Central America who are working illegally—thousands of them in this province—and we have to stop that. The best way to stop it is to extend some kind of amnesty, so that people can report these recruiters and report the employers who are following this course of action.