I'll start and then perhaps pass to my other colleague.
We would certainly agree, sir, that we want all refugees to be aware of the services that are available to them, and we work with the private sponsorship community quite intensively. We have training programs and so forth for them to make sure that they are aware of all the services that are available to refugees.
But, of course, as the minister said, privately sponsored refugees often already have family, social, or cultural links to Canada. A number of them have official language skills of some sort. About 60% of the Syrian refugees self-declared as speaking some English or French, for example. I think this would explain the rate of the differential usage, while at the same time we certainly encourage all refugees to access the settlement programs they are entitled to use.