Sure. In communities like you're speaking of in the inner city of Montreal, the Skills Link programming is fundamentally important with its project base, a full continuum of supports, a menu, if you like. When it was designed and put in place some years ago, it was a world-leading design and today, as I travel the world in my work at the OECD, I still find countries that are looking to adopt a project-based approach. In fact, while Skills Link is a name, it is actually hundreds of different small programs that are specifically designed for communities and I'm sure that, as a member in that area, you can see the tiny programs at play.
Every year we help more than 11,000 disadvantaged kids through that program, kids who have not completed high school, and our results are pretty good. We had 5,700 of them in our evaluation of that 11,000 who found jobs, and another 1,700 returned to school.