Thank you, Ms. Bond.
It's quite enlightening to find out that we in Canada have a unique system and one of the best. It's great to know that more than 300,000 have come through that system.
One of the challenges we've seen in various studies here is that when we have a selection-based system—and I'm not critical of the system, but I'm worried—usually communities tend to...not all of them. A lot of them invite refugees from various cultures and different religions and groups, but a lot of times we culturally pick out ones that are more close to us, and what happens is that those with support networks in Canada get invited, but those who might be more vulnerable get left behind because they have maybe no connection in Canada. An example was the Yazidis. They had no roots here, so there was nobody really calling for them, except for one or two groups.
How do you balance that in comparison to government sponsorship of refugees, which turns a blind eye to that and only looks at vulnerability and those classes? This system is great. It's absolutely correct that they have a higher success at integration into Canada and resettlement; however, that is the one concern. Have there been any ways that you think we can address that concern?