Generally speaking, on the issue of the terms and conditions, as I said to Mr. Christopherson, we try terribly hard to make sure we make acute and sharp risk assessments whenever we release somebody and attach terms and conditions to them. I think for the most part people we release in this fashion abide by the terms and conditions. Some of them do not. Some of them disappear into the ether, and they become part of the warrant inventory that's mentioned in the report.
Again, you can get people who are perfectly acceptable and legitimate presenting themselves for refugee processing, and for reasons that are unclear to us at the time they present themselves on the first arrival in Canada, they go into criminal activity or they find themselves in social situations that lure them into criminal activity once they're in Canada. There's a certain amount we can do in terms of what we know about them, but we can't always predict what they're going to do once they're here.
In terms of the resources you're referring to, we continue to have pretty robust efforts going in the GTA, for sure. One of the things we do in the GTA, for example, is a program that tries to work with people who have to be removed and to make sure they're given good support for their removal, that they are counselled properly, and on occasion are provided with financial support to guarantee they are going to go when they say they are going to go or when they need to leave.