I personally haven't heard about any kind of suggestion to extend that one-year timeline.
Coming back to the issue of housing, we are addressing two different problems. Our experience in Toronto has been that it is difficult and unaffordable for the refugees, but the privately sponsored refugees are better adapted to solving this problem because all of them are immediately trying to work. They are not in ideal working conditions, and they are not getting the best money they can. Some families are working at two jobs, or the breadwinner in the family as well as the children are working. I personally don't see long-term problems with the privately sponsored refuges, but the government-sponsored refugees are quite a concern. No one can forecast what the ramifications will be when the 13th month comes.