I'll start, and let Dave wrap up.
I'm not sure it's about being satisfied. It's about being able to accurately reflect what the investments are creating in terms of faster access to services when and where people need them. In order to do that, we need to acknowledge that, as part of the accord, each province and territory will invest these new federal investments to support their own strategies that they've developed. A lot of them are inspired by the national strategy, but there are nuances and differences, so they are likely to track different components. In our work, we firmly believe that it's possible to have a meaningful set of national indicators against which each jurisdiction is able to measure themselves. That should be our goal.
In terms of where investment should occur, which I think was the other part of your question, certainly what we've learned is that you can't go wrong investing in youth and children. Those investments certainly bring returns and change their quality of life forever, but there are also major needs across the spectrum in terms of at-risk populations and different age groups.