Thank you.
I know, for instance, that the child and youth sector has been hit very hard by the lack of volunteers. If you want to have someone participate in Girl Guides, for instance, in B.C. there is a two-year wait-list because of the lack of volunteers. That's a significant impact in terms of the quality of life of young people across the country. Child and youth services, I believe, have been hit significantly hard.
I believe the impacts of volunteering are across sectors, so there isn't necessarily one or another that stands out more in the data. However, I do think there is something to pay attention to in terms of the kinds of upstream interventions we want to be having and the ways in which we make it easy for people to volunteer in health, in child and youth, in recreation, in arts and culture—across the board.
In terms of data, we need to understand the diverse demographic picture of volunteerism. What does it look like if you're living in a small rural community in Saskatchewan versus if you're in downtown Toronto in Regent Park? What are the models that are going to be effective across diverse demographics and across different kinds of municipalities?
Some of that data, I believe, needs to be done qualitatively in a much more fulsome picture of what effective models exist and what their high-impact practices might look like moving forward into the future.
I would also say corporate Canada has a role to play, and we need to better understand the baseline data that exists around employee-supported volunteerism across corporate Canada as well. There is a role to play in terms of data gathering there too.