Sorry.
Essentially, the green is.... They represent a mix of different programs.
One of the things we're trying to do--this is a good point--is to bring more programs together in the same place. We're working on something called “local immigration partnerships”, or LIPs, where we work with the municipalities, and big groups like the United Way, and try to get better coordination. So instead of having dozens of micro-organizations providing services in their own little silos, we're trying to have a more rational approach to services in a particular neighbourhood, in a particular region.
The bottom line is simply this: after these changes are all said and done, there will be only a slight reduction in the number of service provider organizations in Toronto, and there will be no service gaps. Folks who come to Canada need free language training. They need some advice on how to get integrated. All of those services will be available. I would argue, and I believe our department believes, that they'll be actually more efficiently allocated, both within Toronto proper and across the broader GTA and Ontario, and certainly on a national level.
So I think actually the settlement changes are good news.
We certainly look forward to any questions you may have.
Merci beaucoup.