There are a number of answers. First of all, this is a legally complex situation of shared responsibilities between the federal and provincial governments. You've also had occasion to hear about that.
A number of players have responsibilities. Our commission has responsibility in this area, and we have been working actively on this file for three years. We've obtained a judgment against an agricultural business that had established completely segregational working conditions between two classes of workers. We're in contact with the organizations.
We talked about agricultural workers, but that's not yet true in the case of domestic workers, who are extremely vulnerable. When you're extremely vulnerable, you don't complain, you endure conditions because you want to keep your job and because you don't want to be sent back to your country. We believe that worker vulnerability is definitely an important point that prevents people from reporting situations.