Madam Chair, I'll start, and then I'll ask my colleague Monsieur Gionet to fill in a bit here as well.
Resources are in place to resettle the government's commitment of 10,000 Syrian refugees over the next three years. We have a matching centre. We work with other organizations to bring these refugees in. They are selected in one of three ways: as government-assisted refugees, as privately sponsored refugees, or as something called the blended visa officer referral program, but that one's pretty small. Most of them will come in as either privately sponsored refugees or government-assisted refugees.
Madam Chair, the government offers small repayable loans to refugees to cover the cost of travel, and they're repaid over a small period of time with a very high repayment rate. I'll comment briefly on outcomes for refugees. Outcomes for refugees don't tend to be as good as for other immigrants who are coming, but we do see a small difference between those who are privately sponsored refugees and those who are government-assisted refugees. In the short-term, privately sponsored refugees have better outcomes than government-assisted refugees, although the two catch up with one another over time.
Monsieur Gionet.