I'm not sure what their backlogs are, but they've certainly tightened up in certain areas.
The U.K. has. Australia, in fact, passed legislation back in the 1990s in terms of backlogs of parents, because they were getting huge numbers of applicants. They said basically two things. One was that if you want to bring your parents in, you pay for the medical costs, because they're considerable. The other interesting thing was that they said that they would operate on the balance of family. That is, if the program is based on the reunification of families and bringing them back together, it doesn't make sense if most of the parents' children are somewhere else. So at least half the children have to be in Australia or in some other country than where they're coming from. That cut down the numbers rather dramatically.
Under our system, if you're a sponsored parent, you can bring all the sponsored siblings with you without their having to meet any requirements but health and security. That makes it a very attractive proposition for someone who has four or five siblings. They can come in, and in some cases they can get engaged to someone from back home whose family will pay up to $50,000 to marry a Canadian, and then they can bring in their parents, and you begin a whole new chain.
One of the things the Aussies did was to say balance the family; you can't bring your parents in unless at least half their kids are already...or you're splitting the family up, you're not bringing back--