I just point out that as I look back over the history of planning ranges, the way it's worked over the last number of years, as I recall--I don't have the document in front of me--is generally you would see increments rise in the planning range of, at the high end, say 10,000. Sometimes for three years in a row the planning range was frozen under the previous government, so we are taking the planning range to the highest point it has been in 15 years. I think that reflects two things: our commitment to making sure that our labour market needs are filled and that we provide a home to newcomers from around the world who have done a tremendous amount to strengthen this country in the past, and we think will as part of the future, but also, of course, we think this is key to making Canada more competitive in a global economy.
We're talking about people who are working around the world right now, and those connections help us with trade and in a number of other ways. We want to encourage that, and it's the message we're trying to send along with the $307 million. We want to make sure that those people when they come have the ability to really land on their feet and get the training they need so they can go out there and really be as successful as their predecessors were and like many of our ancestors.