We do a lot of super visas for families. I believe the issue—I obviously don't have the resources to research this—is that a lot of them are already working. The parents come in, and the young families need help economically. The parents are going and working on farms, which is labour work. It's basically unregulated. If they're already coming in, I think it's very important that we be practical. We can either take an enforcement action against them or we can do the practical thing and say, “Listen, we know you guys are probably working.” They have their own private insurance when they come in. We have the ability to say, “If you want to work, we'll issue you a work permit.”
In that way, first of all, they're contributing back to the economy. They're being tracked. We can see who's doing this, and right now, in terms of the shortage, I don't see any reason that we wouldn't implement that.