One of the things we are really excited about is the potential for data linkage. One of the reasons we have such excellent data on the economic outcomes of immigrants of various sorts who come to Canada, including refugees, is that Mr. Kiziltan and his staff have worked very closely with Statistics Canada to enable us to link immigration and tax files anonymously in order to do that kind of evaluation and outcomes monitoring. This year, we are putting in place similar agreements with Ontario and British Columbia on the health side, as well as with New Brunswick and Manitoba, which will enable us to link up our immigration data with health data and get that kind of information.
My own view is that part of the secret sauce here is having those linkages and those datasets available already, so that they're there. Then, when you have new initiatives like this, you can test against existing benchmarks. It takes a while for departments to develop really good data that's reliable and that's linked up, particularly when working across governments.