It's the same approach is what I would say.
Of course, you've all heard me say that women were both frontlined and sidelined during this pandemic. Women, who are more precariously employed, were the first to lose their jobs. They were on the front lines fighting the pandemic.
Again, it's specific, targeted programming, such as our women's employment readiness program, which helps women and provides supports specifically focused on the needs of women, to reduce the barriers to employment and get them the skills and opportunities they need. It's also providing wraparound supports within our programs. If you look at our sectoral workforce solutions program, for example, if an organization receives money for training, they have to provide wraparound supports for women. That could include accommodation, transportation and child care.
Then finally, it's the big bucket of addressing structural, social and more systemic barriers, and the big one there is child care. Women now, with our child care agreements in place with all the provinces and territories, have a real choice about returning to work. That's unlocking the economic potential of half of our population. Again, it's this three-pronged approach: targeted, broad-based and systemic.