Thank you for your question.
I think the government is doing a number of things to try to foster these particular Canadian ethnic media producers across the country.
We have the changing narratives fund, the CNF, which is a $10-million investment over three years to support diverse voices in Canadian media. It's to support diverse communities like indigenous, Black, racialized, ethno-religious minorities and people with disabilities.
We also have the Canada media fund, which supports diverse communities in television, digital media, the screen industry and cinematic production industries. In fact, the CNF is a stream of the CMF; the changing narratives fund is under the Canadian media fund. They prioritize projects that foster development of an inclusive audiovisual sector.
We also have the local journalism initiative, which supports diverse communities in written press, community radio, community television and online news services. It's delivered by a not-for-profit organization to protect the independence of the press, so the government doesn't decide who gets money through that. There's a priority to hire diverse journalistic representation.
The last example I would give is the collective initiatives component of the Canada periodical fund, which supports diverse communities in the magazine and newspaper industries.