I think comparatively the U.S. has a voluntary sector that's been on this in a different way.
One of the programs that we're promoting, at least from the perch that both my husband and I are a part of right now, our world.... What he does is run a ship of about 39 Protestant denominations in Canada. There are over 80 affiliates, such as World Vision and so on. We're seeking to mobilize those denominations at the denominational level to embrace this as one of their top key priorities. They meet annually on a president's day, CEOs only. They go through that, so he's had the blessing to move on this in a way that can get information at ground zero. He'll be working with Catholics and Anglicans on this. It will be a very generic, easy-to-digest type of kit. Again, this is to get people past the myths, which we feel are dominant right now. I tried to articulate our journey, I think partly because we were choosing adoption in our story. People were very aggressive to try to talk us out of it.
So we got the goods for a number of years on that. We're looking at it and saying that when we talk to people at ground zero on what their hurdles are and why they're not adoptive, the first thing we find is the lack of good information--awareness. You'll see that my first recommendation is actually to please endorse in your recommendations, somewhere in some government office, to promote this. I see car seats every night watching the news. I see a whole bunch of things the Canadian government is doing.
We see myths as a big thing. We see fears in objectives. And that is going to take the harder work, because part of the systemic failure that you're going to hear about from people is that in essence, we have a system that is based on bias.