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Citizenship and Immigration committee  What kinds of demographic issues...?

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  You mean the aging population? Right. That's one—

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  If I understand you correctly, Madame, the demographic question you're asking is this. Canadians are getting older. They're living longer. We're going to have more older people. Who is going to provide the workforce to provide the taxes to support the social services for the olde

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  I don't think I can generalize on that. Countries with very different cultural backgrounds sometimes put the surname first; even some western countries, like Hungary. My wife's surname when she was single was the first name, yet she is addressed by her last name as a first name.

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Yes. Certainly I mentioned Afghanistan and Pakistan, but there are others where there are significant security problems or potential terrorist problems. That doesn't mean those are the only ones. You might get a terrorist supporter coming in through a completely different route.

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  It may be true. I must say that I haven't come across that particular one. We do have a lot of people coming in from the States, though, and one of the problems we face is that we get a lot of what are called offshore applications, where somebody, let's say from China, applies

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  I would hope there wouldn't be a major delay, because the person who's making the application is going to come into the embassy anyway. But the costs would be considerable if you had enough Canada-based staff to do this. I don't know what the current figure is. I think it's about

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  A good interview might take an hour or two. No, I don't think it would. We're already facing a problem of wait times because of the sheer volume of people applying. We're not doing things as quickly as we'd like to and should be doing. That's an issue in itself. I don't think t

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Could you repeat that, please?

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  It would allow the interviewer to at least ask some questions about some of the qualifications. If you thought you had fraudulent documents, that would not completely solve that problem. You'd still have to go out and check on those documents with the institute that issued them.

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  There were certain periods when a lot of terrorist supporters came in, which I mentioned, and I think we should have been considering that more carefully. Terrorist problems are relatively recent, though; they have only come up in the last 25 years or so.

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  I'll have to try to refresh myself a bit, but I can pretty well recall what my recommendations were. They were that we do have some security problems; we should be checking people more carefully. We should also be looking at communities where there's more of a risk than in other

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Yes, that would be one of the solutions to this problem. Are you talking about stopping people on security grounds or just stopping refugee claimants in general?

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  Those are two separate issues. The fraudulent documents more often than not relate to people's academic qualifications or financial situation rather than security. The security issues are somewhat different in that they relate to whether they are going to be a threat to national

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott

Citizenship and Immigration committee  If we're basing it on the resources available, I'd have to study that a bit. But based on Canadian labour market needs, I would say probably—and this is a ballpark figure and it will vary with the state of the economy—we could get by quite well on half the number we're bringing i

February 28th, 2012Committee meeting

Martin Collacott