I think the government-assisted refugees program in Canada is also one of the best in the world. We do have a lot of investment in integration supports, which are available to all immigrants, including our government-assisted refugees.
One of the things that has happened in recent years since the surge in Syrian arrivals in 2015 is a lot of innovation at the community level and, subsequently, some government investment in that innovation, including figuring out how to take the best parts of sponsorship and then try to provide them to government-assisted refugees.
There are some interesting pilot programs now that try to match the sponsorship group types of communities around government-assisted refugees, because my own view is that there's no substitute for that very direct multiplicity of supports. We can invest in other kinds of supports, but nothing's going to change having a neighbour who wants to help you.