It's not contradictory. It's going back to the same thing of not being put on the right path.
When I see them being paid in cash, it's not because there's no opportunity for them. There are no programs in place, like the pods that I mentioned, for them to get employment. No Canadian company will hire them, if go to a company and say, “Hello, are you going to hire me?” That's number one.
Number two, when you're getting paid in cash, you are drifting; you don't have direction. My main concern is that they not drift into these things, getting paid in cash, and then getting into more illegal stuff, which we don't want to see. They're really happy they're here. They're more than happy, and they're thanking the government it brought them here. The thing is, I don't want to see them drift. Now, people tell them, “Stay with the government funding. When the settlement allowance is finished, go on welfare. Get paid in cash for that $9-an-hour job and you can still make it.” Their mind is being injected with this mentality, which I don't want to see happen. I'm running from one family to another and saying, “No, no. We don't do that. No, no. We don't do it.” Do you see what I mean? I'm trying not to get them steered toward that, because all cameras are on them right now. Everything is on them. If they are going to do anything wrong, I'll look at them and see they're not good. That's what I don't want to happen.