How the TPP is going to affect them is if they're trying to extend their work permits and switch to another employer or something like that. As I said, it makes them more beholden to that employer. As well, it makes it harder for them to get more employment if they have people bringing in more workers. Once they've been in Canada for some time, their standards start to match the Canadian norm as far as labour goes. They start saying they deserve to be treated this way; they deserve these things. It's going to be harder for them to get employment with those corporations because they'll be bringing in more people who aren't at that level yet.
I speak on this because I see it happen all the time in long-term care. We don't have that percentage within health care because there's a need for health care workers, so we have a large percentage of temporary foreign workers.
I see it every day. When they first come into our country, they're very timid, very afraid. When they've been here longer, once their permanent residency comes into play—if they managed to get it through the provincial nominee program, or if they married a Canadian, or however they ended up getting their permanent residency—they become more involved in things; they become more outspoken. It does very drastically affect the way workers work and how they live their lives.