Absolutely.
We are working very hard on how to incorporate diversity and inclusion across all of our programming, campaigns and initiatives. It's really about relationship building and connecting with communities at a much deeper level. We do that by working with other accelerators because we have a clean technology focus. A lot of other accelerators and innovation communities are more generic—they are health tech, etc. We really lean in with these different partners to have the opportunity to engage once the clean technology companies hit a certain level of maturity.
We have put forward a few proposals to different government agencies for a “women in clean tech” program. MaRS has done some work with the ventures and RBC. We have identified over 50 women who are clean technology leaders across the country.
It's really about capacity and having some bandwidth to lean in on that. We'd love to mobilize some resources to develop and grow that campaign and all the women involved in the clean technology sector.