Well, we've shifted the fund itself and the program to the Department of Aboriginal Affairs. We've directed it there, and it has the funding necessary, in part because.... There are these asymmetries all through government. For example, the Department of Canadian Heritage funds youth programs, whether it's SEVEC or Katimavik or Forum for Young Canadians, but also HRSDC has a number of youth programs. They have different goals and different purposes. It doesn't mean that they should be doing them, but there are these asymmetries.
After having been minister for three years, it was our view last year that it seemed to make a lot more sense to have these programs integrated more effectively under the Department of Aboriginal Affairs, in part because there's greater expertise there—no slight meant to anybody who has worked in my department over many years on these programs and done so with good intentions. The point is that the aboriginal affairs department has a better, comprehensive appreciation for the needs of aboriginal youth in the country--in particular, urban aboriginal youth. To give them the funds, rather than have us try to manage it as a cultural file, and to have it as part of a broader-based approach to supporting aboriginal communities made more sense to us.