That's fantastic.
One of the things we studied on the Status on Women committee was the Australian model. I don't know if you're aware that Australia in 2015 put together their Office of the eSafety Commissioner. It reports to the Australian Communications and Media Authority, which is their CRTC, and among the mandates of that commissioner is to do public education for young people on eSafety and to receive complaints.
This is one of the areas that's very difficult, because young people often don't know where to go to complain. They don't know whether or not it would be your office, but that would be on the privacy side of things. If it's a legal issue, it would be the RCMP or other legal authorities.
Would there be some merit in having a single eSafety commissioner who would oversee, particularly for children, the complaints process? It would be a single point of contact, and it could also do some of the education.