So it will be made public fairly soon.
The other question I have is more of a personal question. In my very rural Alberta riding, we have a number of immigration.... Especially around the Syrian refugees, a kind of umbrella organization came together in one of my communities, Camrose, a community of just under 20,000. They were initially disappointed that they were unable to access government-assisted refugees. They are 50 miles out of Edmonton, and they have a really strong record with refugee resettlement and working with refugees.
Today I heard some of the reasons why. Let me just make it very clear that some of these small groups and communities really take an interest in the process. It may not be a government program that's helping these refugees through; it can be community organizations or faith groups, such as mosques or churches, where everybody really gets engaged.
I would ask a couple of questions. Of the just under 45,000 Syrian refugees who came in during the timeline we're studying here, how many were government-assisted refugees, how many were privately sponsored, and how many may have been some blended form of visa office-referred refugees?