The interim housing program is a very important tool in making sure, as the name portrays, that people have a roof over their heads.
Toronto, like most but not all cities, does have a balanced budget, and Mayor Chow has been quite responsible in saying that she has an obligation, just like her provincial counterparts, to help asylum seekers in a very humane and humanitarian way in the jurisdiction and has taken that on her shoulders and the shoulders of the City of Toronto.
The number we announced—that you attended—builds on the $100 million we announced earlier last year for the same thing. The City of Toronto has received hundreds of millions of dollars over the last little while to face an increasing flow of migrants who are coming to them—whether it's through Pearson, or through Trudeau airport, for that matter, or across the land borders—and gravitating to where their community members are or where they see the prospect of being able to get a job once a visa is issued. That's the federal government's responsibility. We also give interim health benefits while there is due process undertaken with respect to the asylum claims.
These housing initiatives are very important as well in terms of our ability to coordinate so that we can actually issue visas, track people and be able to reduce processing times. If people are all over the place, it's very hard to find them if they change addresses. There is an incidental effect over and above the obviously very humanitarian need to make sure people have a shelter.