I'm Judy Dyck, past president of CASFAA, and I can give you the specific example of Manitoba, which is where I'm from.
We had Canada student loans and Manitoba student loans before the advent of the foundation. Students who were low-income and high-need received all their assistance in the form of loans. With the coming of the foundation, we were able to reduce the debt of students in second through third year of university to a maximum of $6,000 because of the millennium bursary. Manitoba was then able to reinvest its savings from the interest subsidy and create a loan remission program for first-year students and for graduate students, so that the maximum debt that the highest-need students could receive was drastically reduced.
With the new grants that were introduced last year, Manitoba then had the flexibility of negotiating with the foundation how best to use that. They complemented the existing Canada access grants with what is called the Manitoba millennium grant, so that first-year low-income students do not have to pay any tuition. They also created something called the Manitoba millennium grant for low-income aboriginal students, who have a huge need in our province.
Without the Millennium Scholarship Foundation, we would have none of this. We would just have $14,000 of debt for high-need students. So as administrators who deal with the students on the ground, the advent of the program has just absolutely transformed the kind of support that we're able to offer to students.