I have reason to believe there is more recent data in existence than is in the report. It seems to stop at 2006.
Now, some of the federal-provincial agreements were changed such that there's less incentive for provinces to submit data to the federal government than there was prior to 2006. In 2000 we actually had a federal-provincial agreement about children. It was a national children's agenda, and there was some information-sharing under that.
I cannot follow that past 2006. That's pretty old data in terms of the real impacts for children. That's a long time in the lives of children.
I do have reason to believe there is some more recent data than was put in the report.