Youth are very interested in the charitable sector, no doubt about that. They are volunteering. We sometimes think they are not, but they are. They're the largest group of volunteers in the country. They volunteer fewer hours, but they volunteer in very big numbers.
Their expectations are often different. They may go from one charity to another, rather than staying with the same charity for 30 years. That's a challenge for charities sometimes, but it is really heartening to see.
One way to come into a charitable organization is through volunteering. Another way is through giving. Of course, it's not all about tax credits. We find that when people start giving it's a hook into that organization. They develop a relationship with that organization, and often they start volunteering with it. The kids are asking a lot of questions—and that's not a bad thing—about impact and where organizations are going, what the real results are.
So all of these things, I think, mesh together. It's not only one element, clearly not just a tax credit. But the idea of the stretch is something that could really help them get into it from a different perspective.