I think I can give you an example of where there's great potential. The federal government just signed a single contract to have all of your building maintenance and cleaning done by one company across the entire country. This is a large international corporation and they are going to have to subcontract that work to people who actually do the cleaning and maintenance.
Now, if there were social policies built into that contract, they would look at opportunities to subcontract to social enterprises that are creating training opportunities in communities across Canada, because all of those government buildings, whether they're in Yellowknife, Quebec, or Toronto, have a lot of different opportunities to engage partners. You have the private sector contractor being able to unbundle and look at social clauses based on a government contract and then working with social enterprises to actually deliver the services, which would result in training. It becomes a government, private sector, and community sector partnership, using social enterprise to meet everyone's needs.