You're absolutely correct. There are more dollars involved in it.
The way it's working right now is that we generate, in terms of philanthropic resources, just over half a million dollars a year that goes into the teacher development program. Then Indigenous Services Canada is putting in about $400,000. So we're putting about $900,000 into the development of teacher capacity.
We are really working along the three levels, and we have multiple professionals working with them. We have teacher trainers. We have people who are familiar with the indigenous culture doing the culture development piece. They're typically academics from the post-secondaries. Then we have psychologists and other mental health professionals working with the teachers.
In addition to that, we got some additional resources last year through Jordan's principle and other resources to provide mental health workers to deal with a number of the mental health issues, etc.
We were in a meeting just last week. We said that by the end of the three years we'd be able to provide a much more precise figure of what it costs to generate success, because we're spending a lot of time documenting that.