The challenge is that not all governments understand friendship centres. Not all governments, whether in the north or elsewhere across the country, give us the same credit that you and other members of the panel who have an understanding of the kinds of work and the people who we work with do. Some of us can work with 10, yet some of us have thousands. It's all about access. It's all about equality and ensuring that communities create their own vision. We know what the basic premise of a friendship centre is, but they're all designed and put together according to the priorities and the cultural grouping of where they come from.
Yes, you have to have an open-door policy and be status-blind at a minimum, but there is no minimum for us. It's always that one shoe doesn't fit all friendship centres. That model doesn't work, and we know that.
It's all about governance. It's all about creating, being creative, having one dollar and making it stretch into $9. I think we know that pretty well.