That's an excellent question. In fact, PNP, the provincial nominee programs, have been a success across the country. They've received a significant number of applications, there have been a lot of approvals, and provincial governments are on board with them because of the direct economic impact they can have on the provinces.
We're seeing a lot of PNP approvals from B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, P.E.I., Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Ontario. The programs are very successful. They obviously represent a delegation of authority...or a sharing, I think, is the proper way of looking at it, between the federal government and the provinces. It is very desirable to get the provinces involved in the immigration program. The program is definitely a success and we all hope that we'll continue to expand.
The issue is--and it's one I wanted to address--that when the provinces approve and nominate an individual, it's up to the federal government to do the processing of immigrant visas and to review the individual's background, qualifications, and documents to ensure all the information is accurate and correct. That process is bogging down. There's a new backlog being created.
We've seen PNP processing times go from being under a year to now being up to about 18 months. As a result, provinces are being delayed in getting the benefit of the immigrants arriving in their territory and in them being able to do the job or to establish the business that they promised to establish. So there needs to be an accommodation in the system to recognize that the federal government has to match the increased involvement of the provincial governments in selecting PNPs by increasing its own capacity to process visas and issue approvals to PNP applicants.