Let me just fill in a little bit on the astronomy side as well.
Public outreach and broad education of the Canadian public have been a priority in the astronomy plan right from the outset, and significant resources have been allocated towards that. The long-range plan, in fact, made a proposal that approximately 2% of all the funding would be put toward directed efforts to engage the public through outreach activities, as well as targeting the science education efforts. Some of that is already going on, even without that targeted funding. The reality, of course, is that to make this really work, you have to put your money where your mouth is, and that's one of the challenges, that we don't have a national science education plan—and I speak as an educator now. We actually really don't have that particular vision in mind.
That said, 2009 is the International Year of Astronomy, and the professional organizations, the Canadian Astronomical Society, as well as the several amateur astronomical societies are very strongly engaged, working collaboratively on actually using that as a platform in which to bring the excitement, the research results, and what the future of astronomical research will be to people in the classroom, our young children who are going to be the next generation of scientists.