We've had a lot of success. It has been an excellent program for us to start with. We were one of the original cohorts of centres of excellence for commercialization and research. We were successfully renewed in that program, but we have outgrown those types of programs.
In the previous session there was a lot of discussion about how government, how we as Canada, can do this better. An organization such as CDRD, that has a national focus and is about bringing together the right people in the right regional centre.... For example, we don't want to build everything at CDRD. We need to leverage what has already been built and what has already been built successfully.
At Dalhousie we have our zebrafish node. The CDRD zebrafish node is a very interesting cutting-edge, global-leading centre. Basically, zebrafish are little transparent fish. You can see their insides. You can see, without killing the fish, how a drug is working, or you can just see them swimming around. You can do tests on them.
There is a researcher at Dalhousie who has a world-class zebrafish node. We have a relationship with him. We can use their resources, their expertise, so that researchers all across the country can benefit from that.