Thank you.
Just because of time limitations, what I'd ask all our witnesses to do, then, is to send a follow-up in writing, the specific information, whether it's Chinook keywords or whatever it is, that the committee should request and publish so that we can ensure that you have the information going forward and we have that information as well.
Professor Christian, Mr. Meurrens and Ms. Miedema, would you maybe nod to confirm that you're able to do that in the next little while, to send us that information and we will work on getting a motion adopted at this committee with respect to that?
Okay. Thank you.
I will say as well, even information that's available through ATIP. Given issues of redaction and access, I think it's still worthwhile for the committee to include some of that information as part of a document request motion in order to publish that on our website and have ease of access.
Ms. Miedema, thank you for the incredible work you're doing with respect to refugees and for your testimony today. It has been an ongoing frustration for me in talking to those involved with private sponsorship, the piling on of challenges, of red tape, of additional burdens. It seems as though continually the approach is how do we squeeze private sponsors, instead of empowering them and facilitating the great work that they do.
It also seems to me that the fairest system and the way we welcome the most refugees is for the government to spend as much of its time, energy and resources as possible in getting behind private sponsors, including through more joint sponsorship programs. If we moved away from this public and private model separately and put all those resources behind joint sponsorship, we could welcome more refugees, and those who are coming as refugees would benefit from being welcomed by a community. Privately sponsored refugees have a huge advantage in terms of coming into existing communities of love and support whereas government-sponsored refugees have a level of financial support but don't have the kind of psychosocial support that comes with being part of a community.
Do you share those ideas and concerns, and could you speak more to how we should be shifting from the current mentality, which is piling barriers on private sponsors, and talk about the things we can do to empower, strengthen and get more people saying yes to being involved in this work?