I think the one concern we have with this, Mr. Dykstra, is the issue of the judge and the representative and the role that representative performs in front of the minister. Our members have to represent their clients in front of the minister, much in the same way as a lawyer would have to represent them in front of a judge.
The provincial government has dealt with this. We've recommended in the CSIC submission we made to this committee a slight adjustment in what you're trying to do, which I think will provide for.... In fact, we welcome being accountable, but we think the accountability has to be along a different line, specifically so that.... The members appear before the immigration minister, which essentially creates, in my view, a question of independence and a question of undue influence on the members.
It would be much better, in our view, that CSIC report to the justice minister, potentially, or to another minister of the crown so that they can be held accountable, report to standing committees, annual reports.... Whatever the accountability mechanisms, I think you're going to find CSIC will be very supportive of that.
We do have some concerns, though, Mr. Dykstra, about the regulator being beholden with just a change in a Canada Gazette notice: today you're the regulator and tomorrow you're not. It creates instability, it creates doubt in the marketplace, and it devalues the hard-working immigration consultants who have gone through the process that is saying they're competent.