Thank you so much. I wanted to understand the concept.
I want to go to both of the teachers' federations, both the Elementary Teachers' Federation and the Ontario Teachers' Federation. I don't think we have any disagreement—not me, anyway—on your overall poverty thrust in terms of the issue I mentioned earlier, nor with Mr. Stapleton, for that matter, from the Toronto City Summit Alliance.
I wanted to ask the two teachers' federations this. We heard this morning, and I was part of a media outreach last night, about the racialized issue in schools and the problems with a lot of children being, because of poverty, discriminated against and, for all kinds of reasons, marginalized in many ways. In Toronto, as you know, we've actually gone as far as establishing an Afrocentric school, but that doesn't really address the problem as a whole. That is just a specific Afrocentric one; there's also the South Asian, and others for other kids.
Given all of that, to what extent do we have community organizations involved with schools or with intercultural, interracial mentorship programs? I'm just trying to see what links there are within the school system to the organization we heard this morning, OCASI, and others trying to help the schools help kids and solve that problem, especially in hardest-hit areas.