Thank you.
I want to go back to the question of infrastructure around settlement issues. I know that in my home community of Burnaby we've seen a significant change, I think, in where refugees settle in British Columbia. Now the city of Burnaby is getting a significant number of those folks; it's stretching the resources of the community, and it happened without warning. Partly it's related to the cost of housing in the greater Vancouver area and the fact that whereas immigrant communities may have settled closer to the urban core in the past, now it's happening in the suburbs, and Burnaby has certainly felt the pinch.
It has meant that a new health region, for instance, is involved in a lot of the health issues, and that a new school board is involved in a lot of the issues around young people and their education. There's a different city, a different municipal infrastructure, so it's tough right now in Burnaby, certainly, for refugees who are arriving.
Could you comment on suburban centres, the kind of change that seems to have happened, and the kinds of infrastructure problems that have been created? I suspect it's happening in other cities as well.