Sure, and if you don't mind, I'll use an example around health care and graduate funding. Again, very much like Dr. Aiken mentioned, we're very pleased with the announcement around increased graduate funding in the federal budget.
One area we've been looking at, along with many other regional institutions and with the U15, is building out our rural physician development programming so that we're training people where they will work and live, really living that “live where you learn” model. Those relationships and partnerships are essential. They're very important. The research is taking place in the region, where we can see opportunities to create new ways of looking at, let's say, aging in place in smaller centres, and where we can see the direct impacts of working with indigenous health challenges, the social determinants of health and issues around mental health and addictions, which you sometimes see being done at the larger institutions. However, being at the community face really makes a difference around being able to do that evidence-based research with community. I think we can do it a little bit faster, sometimes, because we do have very strong community relationships and trusted partnerships.