Thank you. That goes back to the question of what has specifically been asked. Yes, it should be given to the provincial governments, but there are two reasons why it's impossible to do it at this time.
First of all, we have a judgment from the British Supreme Court in the Mangat case, where the court decided it's the federal government that decides who will appear before the quasi-judicial authority.
Second, across Canada there are about 5,000 immigration consultants all together--good consultants and bad consultants. So if we start regulating province by province, probably British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec will have the majority of the consultants being regulated by the licensing bodies. But as for setting up a body in a province like New Brunswick, there probably aren't more than 10 consultants there, so that's another problem I see in doing that.