Yes, we've been working for a couple of years now with WAGE and the minister there, doing some really good work.
One thing exactly like that is that we're trying to get young women and girls to experience what manufacturing is—not just shop-floor welding, but all the various positions, from the CEO right down. We actually have a program called “see me, be me”, which was founded, as part of this, by our former chairman of the board Rhonda Barnet, out of AVIT Manufacturing in Peterborough.
It's really important that we do this. I have a young daughter in grade 10 myself, and I'm hearing from her what she's exposed to in the school system, which is not very much.
There are a lot of things the federal government can do to support this happening. There's a huge amount of interest in the manufacturing community to do it. There may be something we can speak about offline specifically on what we're trying to do with the federal government, as well as the manufacturing community in general, because it's really important.