The answer to that is a bit complicated.
The private sponsorship of refugees program in the past had widely varying processing times depending on the part of the world where the refugees were from, primarily based on existing case inventories, processing resources, whether or not we were able to put staff safely into some parts of the world, and things like that.
We have not reduced any refugee processing elsewhere in the world due to the Syrian initiative, so there has been no displacement. That said, the priority on the Syrian project has meant that Syrian privately sponsored refugees are being processed more quickly than some refugees in other parts of the world. This year, because of the tripling of the private sponsorship of refugees program, we are planning to process more privately sponsored refugees from elsewhere in the world than was the case in the previous several years, in addition to the Syrian commitment.