Very quickly, our current model is basically based on a project proponent coming forward and making a submission. We work with that organization to make sure they meet the criteria of our program, and if they do, they basically enter into the competitive pool. This program is oversubscribed in terms of the number of projects we get against what we are able to fund. It's a straightforward grant and contribution program; it's contributions.
New mechanisms would be, for instance, what we're doing with some of the small organizations we've been partnering with. We might use some of our money to seed social enterprise. We did this, again here in Ottawa, with John Howard, but the great example is what we did with the roofing company. We gave them the equivalent of $2,375 per participant or per employee of that new company. They were able to establish a firm using some of our money, which gave full-time living-wage employment to 40 women offenders coming out of the system in British Columbia. Through sustained employment, they were able to afford apartments and to live in their community. That's a great example of how we can find those partnerships, and with small amounts of money, seed an enterprise.