Well, that's right: make the right decision first. That's what Ms. Chow said, sotto voce, but I heard her. I guess lawyers aren't supposed to use Latin, but that's a musical term or whatever.
Anyway, the fact of the matter is that the key is to make the right decision the first time.
I was at a meeting of the International Association of Refugee Law Judges, and Mr. Justice Marshall Rothstein of the Supreme Court of Canada spoke. He indicated that the goal is to make sure that you make the case best before the Immigration and Refugee Board, because your chances of success after that are not very great. That's because there is tremendous deference now, I'm pleased to say, even more so as a result of the Kosta decision, to the expertise of the board. We are an expert body. We know what we're doing.
So the trick is to get the right people, train them properly, monitor them, and look at the overturn rate, for example, to ensure that they get it right the first time. That's what we do now, even in the absence of an appeal.