Sir, you're absolutely right.
I want to clarify. You would know Red River College. Red River College is our member. We're not publicly funded universities; we're the colleges and polytechnics, just to clarify that.
I totally agree with you. Every one of these higher education institutions is servicing so much data. You can't get the provincial operating grant at Red River College unless you have data on enrolment: how many students you accepted, how many you turned away. You had this data. It's publicly available. It's not available nationally. I believe that the federal government can ask and work in this new atmosphere of jurisdictional harmony with the provinces through the forum of labour market ministers, through the newly created labour market information council, to ask why in addition to good Statistics Canada data, we don't have everybody using what's already there. We don't need to invent it. We just need to be able to get at it. I'd go to the 80-20 rule. If you try to get 100% perfect data, you'll never get there. But let's get publicly funded higher education institutions—and in this I include the universities—to get their data out in public. The federal government can do that. It is trying through Employment and Social Development Canada. I encourage you to keep pushing.