That's a very good question. I do not have with me a comparison of the federal and provincial packages of support for seniors versus newcomers to Canada.
I know there has been some narrative, certainly since the Syrian cohort, that with 45,000 Syrian refugees coming to Canada, there are special supports for Syrians even versus other refugee-source countries. I can assure you that, in terms of settlement and integration programming, the department provides the full suite of resettlement services for all refugees coming to Canada and a full suite of settlement services past the six-week point to both refugees and immigrants.
There are distinctions in the refugee class between government-assisted refugees and privately sponsored refugees. I don't know what the knowledge level of the committee is, but government-assisted refugees do receive income support from IRCC for the first 12 months that they're in the country, while privately sponsored refugees receive supports from their private sponsors.
The child tax benefit that I mentioned in my opening statement is, of course, available to all refugees and immigrants to Canada, and as I explained, it is an important and significant federal contribution.