I'd go back to what I mentioned in my opening statement. Creating professional regulation and oversight in care, removing the privatization and profit incentives, and a federal approach to post-secondary supports would be extremely helpful. For a lot of the ones we have now, one school might do it and another might, and a lot of them are specifically doing waivers. The data supports that specifically giving a little financial incentive to go to post-secondary doesn't alleviate any of the issues that start pre-care, during care or post-care. Keeping better national data is one of the most important things. We have very limited national data on child welfare, and that limits any ability to look at one province and say they're doing well over there but not so good there.
I don't know many organizations I can speak of, but Dr. Jacqueline Gahagan from the Atlantic provinces has done a lot of research on increasing at least the post-secondary side. I think she would be fantastic. She spoke with the Senate about a lot of these matters as well.
