Certainly it is our perspective that in co-operation and collaboration with the provinces, the federal money that has been set aside for dental care was distributed to the provinces to sustain and stabilize the existing programs. Across the country, all of the programs are in need of some sort of support. There are better programs than others in certain areas, but there's no one perfect system.
I can't give you a single province that I think you should single out for special treatment. It's Canada; we need to treat everybody equitably.
Yes, there are existing programs, and there are existing administrations, and there are existing relationships among the stakeholders within the provinces, so we don't really need another top-down, administration-heavy, stand-alone program. What most of the programs need is funding so that they can increase the funding levels to cover the cost of providing treatment, because a lot of them don't even cover the cost of providing treatment. Any dentist or dental office that treats a patient on some of these provincial programs is subsidizing the programs out of pocket, and that's not sustainable.
I think that going with the existing programs would be the way to go. The people are there, and they can expand the program to include more people according to the goal that the federal government has, such as the zero-to-12 age group. It would be much better to do it that way, rather than creating a top-heavy, top-down, new administrative program that might capture people who already have dental plans. The eligibility criteria may capture people who already have dental plans. We're already hearing some hints that some employers might be saying that they'll drop their dental plans for people who would be covered by the federal plan, so there would be this unintended consequence.
We feel very strongly that the best way is to flow the money through the existing programs.