It has only been in existence or in operation for a little over a year now, so I think we're just looking at potentially, probably soon, hearing reports from the social development ministry here about its working. We haven't heard anything yet.
It's interesting that it comes with a sort of basket of reforms to income assistance that are very focused on single-parent families and childhood poverty. They've been very piecemeal in nature and in the way they've unravelled, but there has been a shift from forcing folks on income assistance to exhaust every other measure and to be destitute before they can access those benefits to a lens that is more about allowing families to access supports and other forms of income while still maintaining their welfare benefits as a more effective way to move them out of poverty. So while the single-parent employment initiative program is a very targeted and piecemeal program, the recognition of the underlying causes of those families' poverty is the beginning of the kind of long-term, human-rights-based recognition we're talking about. Programs such as that might be some of the very implementable steps across the country to work towards those long-term, human-rights-based goals.