In terms of some of the problems, I have to say that we kind of joke about this. We used to say that most of the immigrants and refugees are going to MTV--Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver. Now it's CTV--Calgary, Toronto, Vancouver--and the larger cities have at least some kind of infrastructure that can take the sudden movement of immigrants and refugees.
By the way, these groups have different needs. We kind of lump all immigrants and refugees together, but each refugee group has a different need; immigrants of different categories have different needs.
The problem becomes much bigger for smaller communities. I come from Windsor, for example. Every time there is a sudden movement, even if you get just 200 or 300 extra refugees or immigrants coming to Windsor, it taxes the whole system--taxes it from the schools, which don't have room, to the hospitals. We do not have the infrastructure to be able to absorb high numbers.
It is not only settlement services. There is a Canadian saying that it takes a village to raise a child; it takes a community, as Bridget said, to settle a newcomer. It's not only the settlement services.
When we are talking about building infrastructure, that would be at least the capacity of the settlement services to work with other groups within the municipality and the community to also help them in terms of the settlement integration.
I believe the shock and the stress taxing our systems in smaller communities is much higher than in the bigger communities, even though they get a larger number of people going to those communities.