Yes. As I said, although the media attention was often—at least for a time—on how many we would get here in what period of time, the main challenge has always been not that issue but how well we will receive them, welcome them, and integrate them, so that they, like other refugees from other countries in the past, will as quickly as possible become fully functioning Canadians or permanent residents with a job, a family, and everything else.
The government-assisted refugees, as I've said, are particularly vulnerable. The typical government-assisted refugee from Syria speaks not a word of English or French, often has not much education, and frequently has not been on an airplane until they came here. For them, they're in a brand new, totally different environment. Unlike the privately sponsored refugees, they typically don't know a soul in Canada, so they're on their own in that sense. We have to make sure that they're not on their own—we in Canada and not just the federal government, because as I said, it's not a federal project—and that at the settlement level it's at least as much provincial government settlement agencies and others that are there to help them get the housing, get the language training, and get the jobs.
I have been doing many things to try to promote that process on each of those three fronts. In particular, on the language training, I think we have some additional funding that we can provide, because that's a sine qua non. I know that in some parts of the country—notably, I believe, British Columbia—there is a shortage. There are some bottlenecks. I hope to be able to address those.