We have commitments to make and that we've made on the professional services reductions. I would note that for the interim health benefit, if we have an increase in humanitarian and compassionate arrivals, there will be, by definition, an increase in that spend in the context of people having access to the interim health benefit. There's not a cap. If people come in, they need the health benefit. It kicks in based on arrivals.
I would separate the interim health benefit from the consulting and contracting that we would do with, let's say, IT professionals. We are demonstrating a reduction as early as this year, going into 2026 and 2027 and beyond, as per the budget 2023 commitment that the organization has committed to the reduction.