Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I want to particularly welcome Mr. Bhatti to the committee. He is from the west coast and is joining us by teleconference.
Mr. Bhatti, I want to focus a bit on one of the suggestions you raised. We have over a million applications in the backlog worldwide. Figures given to this committee are that 150,000 of those applications were parents and grandparents in the queue. One suggestion that has come before this committee is that we create a ten-year multiple-entry visa that we could give to these parents as a means of alleviating the backlog on the assumption that a large percentage of those parents would withdraw their application for citizenship if they could get a ten-year multiple-entry visa, and then just come and visit their children when they want.
Researching this, though, I find that Canada has had a five-year multiple-entry visa that's been available to people. Just this summer I found a press release from the government saying that they had increased that to ten years. But nobody seems to have heard of it.
Members of this committee thought that this was a good idea to create this visa; members of this committee weren't even aware that we had such a visa.
So I'm thinking that this five- and ten-year multiple-entry visa is not used very much, not publicized very much, or not granted very much. I'm wondering if you could tell us, in your experience as an immigration lawyer, how many people, how many parents are getting five- or ten-year multiple-entry visas now.