The only thing that I would add is, one of the things that our members have told us is very important and that we've also heard from educators is the issue of transitional assistance for aboriginal peoples because many of them do have to leave their home communities to go to high school. If you live in Old Crow, Yukon, you're only going home at Christmas, and they were debating in Yukon whether to fund a flight home at Easter. It's a big thing.
I think that for any of us, if we were at 14 years old and thrown into a totally alien community with a lot of people who we don't know, it would be a culture that's unfamiliar to us. It would be a pretty tough slog. If you ramp that up to the post-secondary education level, that's one of the things that our members have told us is where one of the fallout points is, of course, that there just isn't a lot of support in many cases for aboriginal students who do have a goal. They know what they want to do. They want to go and seek the post-secondary education to get them there, but unfortunately there just isn't the support once they land in Ottawa, Thunder Bay, or wherever it is that they have to go to get their post-secondary education.