You mentioned in your opening comments that 97% of consular cases are routine. That would leave 3%, which I calculated to be about 8,000 cases that are of varying degrees of difficulty. Irrespective of the difficulty, when someone is in an extreme situation in another part of the world and you repatriate them to Canada, what happens to that person after that? Do you arrange certain services for them, whether health care or psychological services, or is it that once they come to the border, they're sort of passed on to another agency or group that looks after them?
I just wonder what the process is because I know that to bring someone here there's a repatriation process, but even beyond that point, they probably still need some follow-up or help. How does that work in that case?