Okay. You don't see your role, then, as being the gatekeeper. We deal with international affairs here at the federal level and have an important decision-making capacity, to make sure that in 2010, when we sign off an international adoption, we are in fact bringing children into a circumstance that's going to be better for them and not eventually become a difficulty for the Canadian system.
As I just said, we have a report this week that says one in ten children and their families live in poverty in Canada. We had a report last week that said we have almost 9,000 people accessing food banks in our country, and many of them are children or families that have children. Does this not become at all an issue for you—without becoming specific or challenging provinces in terms of their jurisdiction—as you look at the overall circumstance and at questions of our living up to the covenants and the spirit that often attends them, to ensure that we in Canada are in fact providing a good, healthy, and culturally appropriate place for these children to come to and prosper in?