Thank you.
I just wanted to say with regard to your first comment that we also deal with quite a lot of issues regarding temporary foreign workers, migrant workers, and we often see the abuse from employers. If people with closed work permits leave an abusive employment situation, they can very easily end up in detention and face deportation with no opportunity to make a complaint. It's something that we've seen too many times.
With regard to your second question, it is a concern, because there have been legislative changes that have added more securitization to some aspects of immigration enforcement, whether it's new mandatory minimums that make certain things that were criminality into serious criminality or questions around organized criminality and to what extent that's a security issue or a criminality issue.
I don't know that I could speak to whether it could all be handled under a single commission. I think that's unlikely to happen. What I think is more important is that the commission very carefully tease out the cases that really should be under its jurisdiction and not bump them to the national security review process just because there's some element of security in there.