I would answer your question in two parts.
First, with respect to processing and settlement, I can't speak directly to processing because I wasn't abroad and as close to that. With respect to settlement, I know that when families arrived through either the government assistance stream or the privately sponsored stream, there were additional resources put in place to provide access for women and young girls in particular to understand their rights under Canadian law. Those sessions were held separately from sessions for their male peers.
Also, I know the moms and the kids were also separated to try to allow them to have those discussions as peers. The cultural impact was new, and it was felt that it was very important to do this very soon after their arrival.
Through other immigration streams, a lot of that work is done pre-arrival. We were able to engage with the International Organization for Migration to offer those kinds of pre-settlement services. That wasn't an option with the Syrian movement because it was done so quickly. Instead, it was done immediately once those folks landed.
The second part is with respect to the tool that we have developed to monitor the outcomes for this population with respect to their settlement outcomes. I know that the GBA lens has been applied and there will be sex-disaggregated data collected across a whole number of variables so that we're able in the short, medium, and long term to present the data in that way.