Thank you very much.
I guess the objective way of looking at people coming in as immigrants to Canada began in 1967, and it ended up being copied by Australia, New Zealand, England. They're looking at it in Europe. I think they are doing it under the OECD. It's being done by the United States. They are looking at our objective system. That is the good thing about the point system--it's very transparent; people can see it.
We went off the rails. Australia and New Zealand went in another direction. They actually worked with the real world. If you needed a welder, they would be able to be brought in as welders. You would give points for a needed occupation, which we used to do as well. It's a model of building a country through immigration, versus having temporary foreign workers whom, when the economy goes bad, we can get rid of. One thing that is obvious in Canada is that we will always need people to do the jobs that have to be done at the lower end of the skill range.
The chair and I were in Halifax and we walked by a pub—we didn't go in. But this was in Halifax, and they were looking for a cook, a cook's helper, a server, a server's helper, and a dishwasher. Those jobs need to get done. It seems to make more sense to bring immigrants in to fill those jobs, versus bringing in temporary foreign workers. I'll tell you why.
When you take in temporary foreign workers.... Take a look at what's happening in Fort McMurray. A lot of single men are working in Fort McMurray. There's a high incidence of alcohol and drug abuse. This is all over the tar sands, where people are forced to live without their families, particularly the temporary foreign workers who don't have the capacity to fly back to Newfoundland or the Maritimes every couple of months. But that's the reality of what they're living in, and we know that's not very good.
So we want people who will come over and welcome the opportunity to work at some of those jobs that in many cases Canadians don't want to do. Of course, this means you can't get rid of them if the economy turns bad. But the fact is we will always need people working in that part of the economy.
If you look around the table.... Look at the parliamentary secretary. We brought in the men in the sheepskin coats because we had to have some job done that nobody else was going to do or had the capacity to do, and there they came.
I look at Maurizio Bevilacqua. When I went to work in construction, I worked with a lot of Italians and Portuguese, and guess what? Many of them didn't speak the language all that well, but they all were able to work, and they all worked hard and built a life for themselves.
I can look at Ms. Grewal. That's how this country was built.
So I think we have to respect that the point system has to reflect what we need. I think that's where we went off the rails, and I think that's where the Australians and New Zealanders have done better than we have.
Let's keep the openness and transparency of the point system, but make it responsive enough so that it will actually get the people we need into the country. That's where it went so terribly wrong.
I'm still at a loss, because we on the committee knew that this was going down the wrong path. We knew this was the wrong path to go down.