Well, it's about updating the museum policy. I don't have a specific answer, but we're not in the 1970s anymore, and with 21st-century challenges, museum policy has to incorporate youth engagement, multiculturalism, technology...and not just digitization.
I stepped onto the dark side in my career and was a technical writer for Nortel Networks. Even back then, there was a revolution in technology every six months. We ended up just putting the manuals online, because by the time we finished a manual, it was obsolete.
Museums and all cultural organizations are faced with that challenge of keeping up with the technology. The policy actually has to address all of that and the fact that we are working in an international world economy and society. Canadian society is contributing to the global society and the global culture, and we need to have our resources making us strong enough to play at that level.
On a long-term basis, this not going to happen overnight. This is a long-term review and research process that will incorporate all of the programs or get rid of some programs and build new programs. Again, I'm going back to a suite of policies and procedures that will affect us.