I think it's a really interesting question. As has been described by so many of the witnesses today, there's been a real stop-start. Frankly, across provincial and territorial jurisdictions, there have been very different rules and very different expectations of what it means to engage and how that engagement will be supported in sport as well as in other places.
What we know is that as much as sport has not been available because the organizations weren't providing it, people have also been opting out of sport because they themselves didn't feel comfortable putting themselves into those scenarios. In fact, one of the things we're very concerned about is that there is a high dropout rate of youth from sport during adolescent years—among both girls and boys, but girls certainly at higher rates. There's a generation of kids who now are going through COVID where this is maybe the thing that has forced them out, and they won't come back again. That represents a loss of opportunity for well-being throughout their lives.
So to your question about how we should be thinking as leaders about framing the recovery and coming back, I think we want to be encouraging people to be active. We want to be encouraging people to re-engage and resume their participation. As much as possible, I think, the sport system has done a wonderful job of responding to the restrictions and to adapting and ensuring that things are safe. We now need to inspire confidence in people to return.