I'll yield my time for the questions and answers.
Actually, I will add something about the national rollout. Because it's a UBC program--it's been researched for 14 years--we have our data and we presented it at the military research conference. We are now looking to move it into the program delivery phase. It's been run as a research laboratory, which means they run it twice a year only, helping just 12 soldiers as they do it, and evaluating the program. That is now complete.
UBC is going to partner with us on the continual program development and research. But we are going to be starting a national organization that will be delivering this across Canada. We're excited to move forward with a public-private partnership with the military, with the government—VAC, DND—and with the Legion and other community funders. This will help us keep a certain air of independence while also getting anyone who needs the program into it.
We'll be working closely with OSISS and other groups that are already in the communities, already established, and have those contacts to get groups of soldiers together—about six or eight at a time. We have leading teams ready to go in B.C. Last year we were given $1.4 million by the B.C. and Yukon Command of the Legion. That helped us grow our capacity. We're ready to move across the country with this now. We're just going to look at how to get the funding for the local communities.