In terms of settlement services on this side, anecdotally one of the things we found with the large number of Syrians who came was, first of all, there appeared to be very few LGBTQ refugees among the 25,000 Syrians when we should have expected, by numbers, 500 to 1,000. There doesn't seem to have been anywhere near that volume. That, to me, indicates a problem in the selection process. When they came, there was a tendency to assign settlement services to Syrians. The problem for LGBTQ refugees, those few who I do know in that category, for instance, was that they were assigned a language class which their identity made impossible to attend.
Is there any acknowledgement right now that LGBTQ refugees, once they get here, quite often require some different services or specific services? Again, to the second part of my question, there was, I think, a generalized failure to acknowledge that the trauma level might be different for LGBTQ refugees than for others.