I think primarily we've worked, Ms. McLeod, with provincial programs that exist, for example, some of the apprenticeship programs at some of the institutions and trade schools. We've also intersected with Skill Builders, which I referred to earlier. It's a utility-based program that is provincially supported. Any other provincial program that is designed to identify trades and build the capacity of trades we'd be directly tied to.
I might add that one of the concerns we have is, at the high school level, the absence of any real trades programs in B.C. in particular and perhaps beyond that. We still see trades being post-secondary programs. Back in my day, when I went to high school, I went to a trades school where children at the ages of 16 and 17 were starting to learn trades within the high school program. That's been largely dropped from the curriculum of high schools these days. I think there's a niche there that we should revisit as we look over the next generation for trades.