We're currently involved in that daily. Almost all of our coaches in minor hockey are parents. They typically have some experience in the game, maybe not always but mostly, and some even at an elite NHL level. They go back to their Canadian town or city, let's say, and start a family. Now their child is four, five or six years old. It could be a boy or a girl. We have a huge increase in female hockey registration and a very active program. Now the parent says, “I need to be involved. I need to coach. I've played. I want to pass some of this on.”
One of the obstacles—I don't see a way around it currently, but we could brainstorm about it—is that we must ensure that any coach on the ice with our children has a criminal check. We also must ensure that they have a basic coaching training. For instance, with the four-, five-, and six-year-olds, the course is called Introduction to Coaching. Of course, it's based on teaching the core technical skills of skating, puck-handling, passing, and shooting. We require each and every coach to be trained in that way before they're allowed on the ice.
We also insist that they take a Speak Out course to make sure they're up to skill on those issues. So we're asking somebody before they even—