You misunderstood me when I said more time was needed.
Yes, you must have a system. I'll give you an example. If it were filed just one day after.... We just mentioned that one of the cases was filed late. You definitely have to have a system and a procedure, otherwise it will be a never-ending thing. But, for example, there was a file that was one day late and it was rejected. It took five years of taxpayers' money to keep those two refugees in this country, and it was going on and on and on. I don't think that was fair.
The other recommendation is to hire more qualified people, and then you won't have a backlog. The backlog is costing the taxpayers more money. We need to hire more people if we have a backlog. The $100 million that the federal government is spending and the $100 million the provincial government is spending on welfare for refugees is way less than what they are spending on employees. If you spent it on hiring more, Canadians would have more jobs, and at the same time the decisions would be made much faster. I'm sure if you had one officer handling one case—though in some cases you would have to change that—it would probably be more appropriate, more efficient, and more fair.