Yes, absolutely. I think the budget includes some of those front-end conditions. With the bilateral funding, there is the requirement for recognition of credentials. That takes us a step closer to pan-Canadian licensure, which is a necessary step to starting to resolve some of these problems.
To sign on to the Canadian health transfer, there was the requirement to participate in data sharing that was depersonalized and to possibly move toward persistent patient IDs, which are a necessity to start tracking patient utilization across the country.
You then have discussions surrounding benchmarks and other things. I think the benchmarks really have to be focused on two things. The first is access to care. If that is not achieved, we are focused on the wrong thing. The second is improving work environments, which is tightly linked to access.