Mr. Chairman, as the deputy minister said, the department is always prepared to look at reallocation of resources up to a certain point.
One thing that I have to point out, which the member may not be aware of, is that the Department of Foreign Affairs governs the overall management of our foreign service, including immigration officers, in our dozens of bureaus overseas. It's very expensive. I believe they assess a total gross sum of approximately $800,000 for the first year to situate a foreign service officer abroad. It means that every time you add a Canadian visa officer, the cost in the first year can be approximately $800,000 or more.
There's demand everywhere. Mr. Karygiannis would have us add a whole lot more in Colombo. I'm sure everyone at this table could offer to me a suggestion of an office where we should put more personnel. The question of managing our resources in our missions abroad is a very difficult question.
Having said that, Mr. Chairman, I take the member's point very seriously. As it relates to the slightly demagogic point about the swimming pool, you know, I'll take a political risk in defending this by saying that we ask people to go abroad for two or three years, in sometimes very difficult circumstances, to live in places with few or no amenities. The fact that our diplomatic families who are working in Nairobi, for instance, have a place to go on the weekend that is safe, with their children, where they can actually have a little bit of family time or something I don't think is unreasonable. I don't think it is unreasonable to provide a basic level of amenities to the thousands of Canadians who, quite frankly, sometimes risk their lives in very difficult places abroad, or to provide them with some quality of living.
I would not want to convey to our foreign service officers in any ministry that we should strip away from them the very few amenities they have to enjoy with their families.