Yes. We want strings. We think there should be strings.
Look, the Stats Can report that came out two days ago that looked at tuition fees across the country shows that in Ontario, students are paying about $6,000 on average, and students in Newfoundland or Quebec are paying less than $3,000. Just by accident of birth, there's an inequality of access across the country.
If you want to go to law at the University of Toronto, it's $21,000. At McGill University in Quebec, for a Quebec student, it's just over $3,000. Would anybody say that McGill is a second-rate law school? I don't think so.
It's about priorities, but it's about having our federal government play a role in establishing national standards for fairness, for equality of access across the country.
There are other quality benchmarks as well. I think Mr. George would be happy--as would Ms. Patterson, who has just joined us--to see some benchmarks for quality. But we would like to make sure that the money the federal government sends to the provinces for post-secondary education gets used in the way that it's supposed to.