A principal initiative in the last budget was to increase the funding in the Canada social transfer. They gave the impression that it was dedicated funding for post-secondary education, and in fact it wasn't. It's up to the provinces to spend it or not. There's been no movement toward the kind of Canada post-secondary education act that we had called for.
There has been increased funding for research, although the social sciences and humanities continue to be underfunded relative to the natural sciences and health sciences, which is a concern. More than half of all the faculty in this country teach and more than half of all the students study the humanities and social sciences, yet a much smaller proportion of funding goes into research in those areas. That's partly a result of the emphasis, as I've tried to indicate in my presentation, on a narrow version of innovation and commercialization, without recognizing the broader social and commercial values we get from research in the humanities and social sciences.
In terms of their initiatives, it's primarily been the increase in funding in the Canadian social transfer and more money for research.