If it's okay with Chris, I could give the overview. Our president is much closer to the ground and could provide that on-the-ground reality.
I wanted to chime in on the charitable sector in supporting what Peter Dinsdale from the YMCA has said. Friendship centres are also within that charitable non-profit sector. We also support the Imagine Canada call for the sector stabilization and certainly want to ensure that for indigenous not-for-profits, which border both the indigenous world and the non-profit world and have unique needs. We also see ourselves within that sector.
There are a few things on the scrutiny side. Certainly, from indigenous non-profits, we have huge scrutiny for the $375 million. We're getting questions every day, so I definitely look at that. I look at what the government and the municipalities are saving by propping up the sector and ensuring that we're covering off the most vulnerable. We're covering off the people who would otherwise have no place to go, which may drive up costs in other places.
We also have community trust and accountability, which are our anchor. If we didn't have the trust and accountability of our communities, we wouldn't have that same trust and accountability from our funders. The challenges I think are vast. Our president, who works with our friendship centres every single day, would be able to speak better to those on-the-ground realities.