Sure. I think many of the refugee families are composed of six to eight children, and particularly, we're focusing on those most in need. We're taking families that need to seek specialist treatment in tropical diseases, HIV. So you're paying for three zones, where the actual funding for resettlement was only designed for one zone. So it can cost a family $25 to $30 to get to an appointment, which they have to go to, there's no other option. If you're living in Burnaby...in Vancouver. Basically, parents sometimes miss the appointments or they just don't have any food for that week. The amount of assistance is based on welfare, which is the lowest in the whole of Canada for British Columbia, but it is one of the most expensive provinces to live in. So that's why we're coming across this situation.
Also, the problem is that many of the communities don't have funding for translators. It was never designed to meet the needs of refugees. So unless a public health nurse attends with the client, with the interpreter from Fraser Health, the client doesn't get access to a translator. So that's another challenge facing us.