When I mentioned $200,000, Ms. Kwan, it's what RIAC would need to be able to look after a thousand individuals per year.
In terms of services, adults don't have access to English as a second language services in a volume that allows them to quickly gain access to the labour market. In terms of services that an individual requires, it's more interpretation than language training. Translation and these kinds of services are required to be settled, to be organized, and to be put into the market. There's a good number of individuals who out of the goodness of their hearts go and do translation, but there is no professional I know of specifically for the mental health issues.
Post-secondary education requires a bit of a shakeup, because teenagers come here and are placed where they don't feel that they fit. People from Latin America, say, who come here and are placed in grade 10 have already seen all the subjects, so that is motivation for them to skip school and to go out and abandon education altogether. That is a trend that hasn't been seen in the numbers. This is something that families really are concerned about. They want their children to be able to stay in school and pursue a career.