That would be part of the mitigation plan that the family would put forward. They would say, “We won't access these services, because we will do X, Y, or Z instead.” Our medical officers will look at that and evaluate whether it is a practical plan. If, for example, they said, “We won't access special education services because we won't send our child to school at all”, we would say that is not a plan, in terms of overall Canadian morals, that we would find acceptable.
In terms of the mitigation plans themselves, if that then turns the switch off with regard to the medical inadmissibility concerns, we have no authority to enforce that mitigation plan once someone becomes a permanent resident.