Sure. We have a lot of rules here about contracts and about how you spend money, and about results-based management and about structures and systems and reporting it, all these things, the transparency and the documents that they need to fill in, and the legality of certain things and the contracts they have to sign. That hampers the ability of a lot of the small organizations to do the work with the Canadian government.
I understand the need for us to protect our taxpayers' money and to protect the legality of issues, but we've moved forward and we've all realized from studying international development that this hampers real effort and real development. We have to bridge the gap, yet we're not comfortable. Because we're so risk averse, we're not willing to go there, but there's so much benefit from doing that.