Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much for your presentation here today.
That was one of the things that I wanted to hear as well: with so many agencies present in Haiti, it almost sounds like you would be tripping over each other, so I'm very pleased to hear that there is a system of working together and of pinpointing the areas where you have expertise so that you focus on those. I think that's very helpful.
Mr. McCort, I do have a question for you, though. You talked about CARE Canada having been in Haiti for a 50-year involvement, which says to me--and I recognize that you talked about an international donation base and that it's not just Canadian money going there--that it seems there would be approximately three generations of young people, then, who we have focused on education. We have given them some sort of education. Maybe it hasn't been for the whole population, but we've had some impact.
What's happening to those young people? Are they now part of the diaspora? Are they in Canada? If so, is there a contribution back to Haiti culturally from an education perspective? Are those young people leaving and not reinvesting in Haiti, or are they becoming the people who are now going into government and social services and who are part of the response team that we need to see from a national perspective? Could you give us some insight into that?