Yes, that speaks to the humanitarian and compassionate application. There are many problems with it. One issue is around how they define who is facing excessive hardship. They often define it in terms of the risk to personal life. So if someone has lost a refugee claim, odds are almost by definition that they're not going to be considered as facing excessive hardship when they go back.
So I think it's important to look at how to relax the H and C application to allow for a broader set of considerations beyond just risk to life or risk to security, but looking at other forms of contributions that individuals are making and other kinds of hardships they will face will certainly help with some of the situations as well.