About 12 hours. Okay. You came to us from the Ukraine.
For clarity, I'm going to say something here, and I need your confirmation. This is my understanding, and I want the whole committee to understand this. My understanding is that, Ms. Bezo, you're—I don't know what the correct word is—engaged with the Canadian Bureau for International Education in the delivery of this service in the Ukraine. So the testimony here today is of highest value in your ability to help us understand the ways in which Canadians can interface with people in Mongolia, people in the Ukraine, people where they desire to have this service. So that is the value of your testimony.
I think what we're looking at with the committee is, in addition to this model, which is funded by CIDA—in addition to, not in competition with—I believe it is the desire of the committee to take a look at other ways where we may be able to engage retired civil servants on a voluntary basis. I would really encourage you to help us with this. And for the benefit of the committee members, CESO, the Canadian executive services overseas, which has a model not at all related to what we're talking about here but one of retired people being able to deliver their services, are going to be witnesses at our meeting next Tuesday. So you represent to us the ideas or the best practices, our experience of the delivery of the service, and what we're going to get from CESO on Tuesday is an additional vehicle by which those services could be delivered.
Within that context, then, I wonder if you could help us understand, for example, how an organization would, whatever this new organization is that will be created under the memorandum of understanding that our Prime Minister and the Mongolian Prime Minister signed.... What can you take from what you're presently doing? What would it look like? What do we need to take from that to this new model, a CESO kind of a model?