Maybe I can start and Nicole can supplement. Again, with respect to adoptions, as you know, there are two approval processes.
One is the domestic approval process, which is really run by the province, and the second one is the international one, which is done on our immigration side. The second one requires confirmation that the host country's regulations have been followed and that local laws and procedures have been followed, etc. That's really to make sure that from both aspects we cover the best interests of the child.
Certainly in the case of Haiti, the adoptions we were able to accelerate were the ones that had already been approved at the provincial level. Then we got a special provision to get essentially the head of the country to approve their going abroad. It was very unique.
One of things when we look at adoptions, of course, is that we have to ensure that we're always trying to compare the same situation, and this is where it all.... So the comparison, really, if you're born abroad, whether to Canadian parents or as somebody who's going to be adopted...those cases have to be treated equally in terms of ensuring that we're following Canadian law and comparability, and that's where it becomes a bit tricky.
There are other situations where you have border babies. In New Brunswick, for example, they sometimes go across the border for birth, so you also have to compare that kind of thing.
That's the challenge in trying to do this.
Nicole, do you want to elaborate a bit further on that? No?