Maybe I can answer that one. Indeed, with regard to the intent, we've talked a lot about the pivoting and moving to the more restrained support programs, which are for the tourism and hospitality and hard-hit businesses. But also the notion is, as you rightly point out, that a lot of the businesses are recovering, but not all of them are recovering in the same way. The Canada recovery hiring program allows for those who are recovering and starting to rehire, but maybe not all the way back, who still have revenue losses vis-à-vis where they were pre-pandemic, to get a subsidy to hire workers more or less—and I'm going to generalize here—at the levels at which they were at the time of the budget. That program is now being extended. The idea there, of course, is that those businesses that have started to recover but that don't need the support they were getting previously can continue to get a subsidy.
Now in terms of the take-up numbers for that program, as you know for both the wage subsidy and the rent subsidy the CRA provides very detailed tracking on their website on the number of claims and on the number of applicants and whatnot. That information is publicly available. The intent is to do the same thing with the Canada recovery program once all of that data is available and can be put up, so that will be available once—