Well, Germany has a guest worker program too. But essentially, it means that you have trouble integrating.
One of the interesting things I noticed back in 1999 is the settling of people outside of major communities. Thunder Bay made huge preparations to accept the Kosovars. The whole town got behind it. They had their place set up and everything else. Nobody came. They preferred Toronto and being around their group. So there's a limit to what communities can do.
When I go to low-density areas in the province, I notice all sorts of Vietnamese. I see Sikhs. They're starting businesses and working at businesses. As much as the Chinese at one point used to run the variety stores, now there are different groups. The newcomers are the ones who fit in. They do that for business opportunities.
You mentioned that we should have same levels of service. Obviously a small community is not going to have the same service as a major urban centre. They don't have physicians for the general population, or many of the other services. I'm wondering how you would try to bridge that divide. The sponsoring groups have come to this committee and said they don't get all the people they could to sponsor as refugees. If they were doing the sponsoring to under-serviced areas, more than likely they would have a network to support them in the smaller communities. I wonder if you have given that any thought--that maybe they could actually specialize in doing that.