I can begin, and then my colleague may want to jump in.
Certainly, we have our usual data collection tools here at IRCC. They include our longitudinal immigration database, which uses administrative immigration data to track who has applied, who has entered the country, who has become a permanent resident, where they intend to stay and where they file tax returns in subsequent years. With these types of tools we can assess in the long term whether or not people have stayed in the area where they originally intended to reside. It's our retention data.
That said, and as I mentioned in the presentation, I think that for this pilot we'll be looking to get some more granular and real-time data from communities themselves. As part of that partnership with community development organizations, we'd be asking them to collect some data as we go along so that we can use that to inform any evaluations of the pilot and take those lessons as we develop future programming.