I think in addition to the wait-lists for language classes, whether they're French or English, one of the things the government has to undertake is a seat availability analysis to look at how many seats there are available to learn one of Canada's two official languages.
We proved during the Syrian refugee resettlement initiative that the sector could respond very quickly and ramp up services, but the issue is, if immigration for the foreseeable future is going to begin to address rural and economic needs in smaller communities where there isn't, necessarily, the infrastructure already in place, it's going to require a rethink of how we provide services so folks who are attracted to smaller and rural communities are retained in those local communities. That means the use of technology, online learning, telephone interpretation, and various other uses of social media as one aspect of that. So it's complicated, but it really depends on the number, too. We're waiting, as Canadians are across the country, to ascertain what this multi-year immigration plan is going to be.