Thanks, Mr. Chairman.
I want to thank the witnesses for being here.
I want to say, too, that we have this very unique group in Hamilton called the Hamilton poverty round table. It's creating quite a model of speaking about removing the silo mentality and trying to synergize between organizations that operate not just with government money from all levels but also with private donations. Certainly, from what I've seen in terms of not only rights but also the whole challenge of moving someone from a destitute situation, and transitioning them into a place where they can both flourish and make a contribution, adequate housing is the key issue. Of course, if you don't have an address, you can't get services, you can't apply for a job.
So I'm very thankful for the work you're doing in that regard. In fact, this model is so promising that we appointed the founding chairman of the poverty round table to the federal welfare council, to get it right from that level to our Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development.
On the comment you made to Mr. Marston's question, are there any governments right now in their executive that have a secretary of state or a minister in charge of human rights?