In terms of the processing at the border and at the irregular arrival points, I repeat the observation of UNHCR that things are processing in a very humane manner and diligently.
I would also like to flag that the IRB, over the last 12 months, has done incredible work in creating efficiencies within the system and within the legal and policy frameworks that have increased efficiency by up to 50% with the same resources—that is, without using the resources that were allocated by the federal budget in February. That, I think, is to be commended, because it's a way to go.
Yes, there is a long time frame, up to two years, but that's not odd. There is not a single refugee status determination body, including UNHCR when we are doing it, that does not have those large backlogs. That's a reality of that kind of work. It's resource-intensive. It requires human interpretation. You need to hear. There may be different evidence to be brought. In the meantime, those people, after three weeks, get a work permit, and a large majority of them become self-reliant and therefore can wait. It's clear that there is emotional duress, but when they have fled torture or bombs falling on their house, waiting even for two years—with a work permit, a house, and their kids in school—for a decision from the IRB, I assure you, is not the main problem of those asylum seekers.