I think the response is for us to take a look at CIC's eligibility criteria, and that services should be based on needs and not on status. For example, from what Sherman is saying, even when one becomes a citizen, those service needs don't go away, and folks should be able to access those services regardless of the fact that they've now become Canadians.
In many of the provinces, for example in Ontario, services are based on need, not immigration status. Whether or not you're a citizen, or you're a refugee claimant, or you're a refugee, or you're a permanent resident, you're able to access the kinds of settlement and integration supports that you need. It's something that over the last 20 years from time to time we have raised with Citizenship and Immigration Canada in terms of broadening who has access to services, but particularly around the citizenship piece.