Thank you for being the only one who's fighting for CBC/Radio-Canada in your riding. I greatly appreciate that. It's very important.
Values, and making sure that we express a diversity of voices, is one of the very important priorities. As the president and CEO of CBC/Radio-Canada, I actually expressed in my key performance indicators, which are on the web and very public, how I get to be evaluated in the delivery of our services.
We're going to talk about fitness and Vote Compass in a second, because we exactly address this. We're going to talk to you about how we think Canadians are telling us, because we constantly survey what they would like to hear and have delivered. We went to Calgary with the news. We did a panel recently. The Current went and spent two days in Calgary. We are very aware that we need to present different pieces of Canada to the listeners and to the people who watch CBC/Radio-Canada.
Let's talk about Vote Compass for a second, before I turn it over to Christine on fitness. What we did out of B.C., which was a program that turned into a great initiative, was a spectacular way for us to engage Canadians in fitness.
I want to talk about Vote Compass. Vote Compass was not about the instrument. Vote Compass was about only 50-some percent of Canadians going to the polls. For us as a public broadcaster, that's a concern. That number is not high enough. We want people to get engaged in issues. We want people to go out and form opinions. Our job is to ensure that with the diversity of services, diversity of voices we give you, Canadians can actually make up their minds on issues and show up at the polls and tick the box, understanding issues and having conversations, whether it's at home or whether it's in school.
You do not know the number of high school teachers who actually rang us and gave us testimony about this: “For the first time ever, I now have an instrument that I can use to have conversations with kids who are now 17 or 18 years old, first-time voters, who have no clue.” When they have these conversations, they go home and say “Hey, mom, how about this issue”. All of a sudden, the parents are saying “Whoops, where did you do this, and how come you had this conversation?” All of a sudden, this conversation starts another conversation. That was the purpose of Vote Compass--not the tool in itself, but the issue about bringing more information to Canadians so they could be better voters. That was the purpose behind it.
Let's talk about fitness, because that was a great initiative.