I'll just quickly comment. I would not know some of the details in terms of the advisory composition you might be putting forward. Certainly, as a national and international organization ourselves, we always have advisory committees.
To Gary's point, one of the things that we think is fundamental to this is the fact that we want to see the beginnings of something that we see as fundamental for Canadians. We want to demystify the whole financial literacy nomenclature and make sure that every Canadian understands this, actually has access, and isn't intimidated by something. This is why those people, whether it be an advisory board or the leader, have to understand some of these very basic elements.
We do speak from a space of understanding and knowledge as the trusted broker between the educator—in our case, the business community—and those mentors who actually provide that enrichment for students across Canada. I think that collaboration is absolutely essential. You have these four organizations before you today because we are so passionate about this. How you sequence it and who it is I think will actually be successful based on the relationships they have with the organizations beyond here.
In the past, Junior Achievement has not received any government funding from the federal government, not in its last 58 years. We see the need, and we're before you today because we see the need for a financial leader. I think that's germane to what you're asking.