If I may just add something, GE supports an organization called Actua. Their offices are here in Ottawa. They have a special program for first nations, and last year it supported 20,000 students. They deliver programs in science and technology for 9- to 15-year-olds. The whole purpose is to get kids excited about science and technology, and they do that in a variety of ways.
For first nations, they're also culturally adapted, so for example, kids make gloves out of whale blubber and put their hands into freezing water and understand.
One of the great stories about this is that for one of the programs that was run in the far north—and you never know how many kids are going to come—the first day there were 50. The next day there were 100, and then 150, and then all the elders started coming as well. The comment was that this is what we tell you about climate change, and why we hunt two months earlier, and so on.
This kind of program is having a great impact, and the feedback from the kids in terms of now wanting to do something in science and technology has actually been quite compelling. We fund that program. We're in our sixth year with the organization, and they are increasing the number of outreach programs to first nations in very remote communities. They fly in university students. Many of them are first nations students who are in university, and who then go into the communities to take the camps with the students as well.