Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to all of our witnesses for being here today.
Obviously, low literacy can lead to underemployment, but also a mismatch between skills and what is necessarily demanded by the market is important, so I'm going to go to Colleges and Institutes Canada to start with.
First of all, BCIT, one of the leading institutes in British Columbia, puts firmly on its web page a link so that students can find out not just about the program they're entering but also about the local labour demand for those jobs. That's something they do independently of anything. In the United States, for example, you have a college scorecard, which demands that any institution that receives federal funding, whether it is a college or otherwise, has to post that kind of information.
Are your members stepping up to communicate to students where the jobs are in their regions and making sure the programming matches those jobs?