Yes, provincially there is ISARC. Though lots of members of ISARC represent national bodies, to my knowledge there is no national coordination. And that's something we definitely should be working on, because I do strongly believe there is a very large role for faith groups to play in creating that safe political space within which we can have these discussions that, traditionally, have been very controversial and, let's say, unpopular in general with Canadians when it comes down to it, such as EI reform and those sorts of things. I think governments are often very hesitant to engage in those types of conversations, and they fall back on safe discussions around child poverty. But as we've heard today, child poverty is not just child poverty; you can't get at or solve child poverty without looking at strategies that support single mothers in particular, racialized groups, and families. A lot of families with dual incomes today are still low-income families.
Perhaps the role the federal government can play there is to provide support for and recognition of that sector, as well as the third sector in general and non-profits. But the faith groups in general do have a very important role to play, especially around that conversation of justice versus charity. This is not charity; this is justice we're talking about. This is human rights.