Social enterprise in itself was taught as a tool for delivering new services and also for the sustainability of PMC, so that's the whole idea of where it is coming from. But it's important to note that we chose this area because there are service gaps. We see settlement services and then there are gaps because newcomers, if they need legal services, if they need life services, or if they need immigration services for their families, are sometimes lost and don't know where to go. Sometimes they're paying high dollars for the small service they are getting.
So there's a need out there. The need plus our ability to deliver is what pushed us into going for this. As well, we have had similar successful projects by settlement agencies. There's an agency in Belleville that does translation and interpretation services as its social enterprise, and they are doing very well. They are in the black and they are reinvesting the profit they are making from this project back into their social services. Similarly, an agency in Sault Ste. Marie does immigration services. We chose it because we are in a bigger geographical area and we think we have the capacity to do three related areas.