I'm trying to decide what to start with to answer your questions because you've raised a number of points.
Let me start with your last question. As I said at the top of my presentation, we know that because of the huge change that happened in 2005-06, there was a delay in the rollout of the COIA. There was a need to build capacity both within the department and within the sector, and hence the slippage of dollars.
Even with the 5% strategic review, we believe that cut could have been absorbed without the drastic cuts we have seen in the province. Certainly, not only will clients be impacted in terms of services, but also agencies are employers. They have the same legal responsibility in terms of employees that the federal government has as the employer of the public service, or as our private sector has. That's one of the concerns: that because of the relationship that non-profits have with government--and particularly with the federal government, where we have contribution agreements as opposed to grants--they often do not have the room to develop contingency plans over many years.
When you hear the Afghan Association speak about liabilities, that is a very real cost. It is something we are working on with Citizenship and Immigration Canada, to figure out a way that they can help support the agencies through those kinds of transitions as it has to do with their legal liabilities around issues of severance, working notices, lease agreements, and those kinds of things.
We are certainly looking at one of your suggestions, and we are paying particular attention to the 2012-13 fiscal year when the settlement allocation model is supposed to be rolled out. If we're using 2009 landing numbers for Ontario in 2010, we're looking at 118, 120, taking into account roughly the number of refugees plus permanent residents landing, and we're looking at an additional $20 million cut. There is just absolutely no way the province can afford to absorb another $20 million in 2012-13, particularly before we know the real impacts of the $43 million cut we'll have had.