Thank you, Madam Chair.
I have a subamendment to that. It's very simple. I'll tell you what I want to do. I want to add the word “consecutive” in between “1,095” and “days”. In other words, it would say they have been “in Canada for at least 1,095 consecutive days.”
Now the logic of this goes back to.... Ms. Kwan mentioned that she liked her amendment with the additional, more detailed criteria, and then what Ms. Lalonde proposed was a much simpler criteria.
This is a little bit in the middle because it does make it a little bit tougher to meet a consecutive clause, but we also heard from our witnesses who said that the most common thing that they hear is that somebody studied here in school. You talked about university or other things and you said that, in those cases, it's very easy and straightforward to prove that.
To my way of thinking, this isn't a difficult test to match. It's also much simpler to prove at the end of the day when it's consecutive. That's why I would move this subamendment to put “consecutive” in there between “1,095” and “days”. I think that would be a stronger test and I don't think it's adding a lot of burden to people. It actually simplifies the department's work on this.
That's my proposal.