Yes. I think that's exactly right. When we lost, here in Ontario, all of the independent licensed child care centres, 1,200 of them, during the rollout of the full-day kindergarten program, originally those licensed child care centres.... They mostly also provided full-day kindergarten. Among those licensed child care centres, there were about 20 different recognized, reputable and high-quality teaching and learning methodologies used. This would include things like Montessori, Reggio Emilia and a few different curriculums like that.
When those centres closed in favour of this full-day kindergarten program, we lost all of that diversity of programming as well. There was a sameness and kind of a lowest-common-denominator approach taken to the whole sector as opposed to giving parents choices. That's a really key element of parental choice. You tend not to have parental choice when the focus is on creating these big, monolithic institutions to deliver care.