I'd liken it to saying, if you want to go from Vancouver to Ottawa, you should have a railroad. It's an enabling matter, because it then says that individuals within Canada, for instance, who are not regulated and who practise in those areas are actually violating the Immigration Act and the RCMP could be involved.
It states that for those individuals who are outside of Canada doing those things, if they seek entry to Canada, CBSA is involved, because as you know, you don't have to be convicted of violating an act to be inadmissible to Canada. You need to have violated the act. That's basically the rule. So they could actually refuse entry to rogue agents who are running around, coming here to solicit more business, and doing all the things we don't want them to do. So by drawing the line at just a different place in the sand, it really opens up to many people.
Our members advertise in ethnic press, and they come back and say, “Yes, but my ad is right alongside this other guy's, who's not paying any fees to CSIC, CAPIC, or anybody else.” So we'll write to the publisher, and the publisher will say, “Well, what's he doing wrong? What's the rule?” And we can't give him that moral authority.