Someone mentioned earlier the costs of family reunification and the costs of the family impacts. I happen to come, Mr. Waldman, from Manitoba. You mentioned it earlier. There's a situation of human capital involved here, where the families can't get on with their regular lives because they're so busy worrying about the person in the family who has this disability, and they need to be able to deal with that locally and in their own family. In this case, the person was trained in a particular occupation that was deemed to be a fairly high-paying occupation, I would say, and they're working in one here in Canada now at a much lower rate. Because they have been held up for six years, or some years, to become permanent residents of Canada, they can't even train to get the upgrading they need to go back to their previous profession.
This is a detriment to the community they live in because there is a very big need for the person's skills in that area. The town has come together fully to adopt and accept this young person into the school system, into the community, yet there's still a situation here a few years later that we're dealing with.
Can you comment on that whole human capital part of it?