I think we're reasonable. For the agri-food immigration pilot, for example, the education requirement is often a problem, because it's hard.
In Quebec, with their program, you need a high school diploma from your home country equivalent to Canada's. That doesn't make sense. There's no grade 12 in the Philippines. You bring in a worker who can't demonstrate that, and you're kind of handcuffed.
Thankfully, we got the government to agree, for the agri-food immigration pilot, that a home equivalency would be the same thing. In the Phillippines that's a grade 10, and that should be our high school diploma. We need to be nimble. We need to be able to recognize that.
Also, we need to accept them on skills training. When they come here there's no better education than my members teaching them how to do that job. You can have a university degree, but it doesn't mean you know how to cut meat. The skills learned here are really critical.
I'll pass it on to Janet because I think she can really add to this.