We do from time to time. I think the last time I talked to the committee we were talking about Haiti, and that's exactly what we did between an Ottawa office and Haiti itself. Delhi transferred workload to Warsaw two or three years ago to try to use resources that may have been underused somewhere else; instead of moving people, moving work to people.
With regard to the processing time itself, it can help where there is no cap--for instance, the spouse caseload. With regard to processing times for skilled workers, the change in policy of limiting the intake has far more impact than GCMS itself.
One thing I should clarify on GCMS is that it has allowed us to, for instance, change some of the processes already. The application for spouse cases is now created in Canada before it goes to the mission. There are a few steps we can save over time so that when it gets to the mission they can concentrate on making the decision and less on clerical functions.