Thank you, Chair.
I want to say welcome to everyone here. Thank you for coming some distance to tell us today how we can make the situation better in Haiti.
Most Canadians were very proud that Canada responded very quickly to the emergency in Haiti in January. We had help on the ground within about 48 hours and helped to keep order, with initial amounts of fresh water and food, etc.
Parallel to that, Canadian immigration services worked quickly on a number of priorities to try to help. As you may know, there was consular assistance. The evacuation of Canadian citizens and permanent residents was first. The evacuation of adoptees from Haiti to Canada was facilitated. There was a temporary suspension on all removals to Haiti. Fee waivers and additional hardship factors were considered for temporary residence in Canada. Visa requirements were suspended for aid workers and evacuees transiting through Canada.
You've told us that priority processing measures were not working as well as we hoped they would. It was for persons directly and significantly affected by the earthquake, including family class sponsorship, citizenship certificates, and reunification of recognized refugees' families.
On the Canadian side, there were applications for spousal sponsorship and protected persons, extensions of temporary resident status, and work permits for Haitians unable to support themselves due to the earthquake.
I'm concerned, as I'm sure everyone here is concerned, with what Mr. Jean-Gilles said in regard to the total number of immigrants based on a fast-track process.
Mr. Jean-Gilles, could you shed some light on this? I don't know how badly the Canadian mission was damaged. I assumed it was a damaged building, as was almost every building in Haiti. They had to rebuild the operation and try to handle a huge volume at the same time. There's no indication of the total volume they handled. There were fairly chaotic conditions from the beginning. They had to do security checks, as they always have, and medical checks. In every case, they had to check that relationships were genuine in order for people to immigrate to Canada, while rebuilding the organization on the ground.
Do you recognize the complexity and the challenges of this requirement, of maintaining the integrity of the immigration process under all these conditions?
As well, you mentioned that having more resources was one solution, Mr. Jean-Gilles. Do you have any suggestions for other possible solutions to facilitate faster immigration?