All right. We heard a bit about contribution agreements before. One of the main challenges, as I understand it, is that the system works pretty well for those who qualify for full legal services and get legal aid assistance. For those who can afford a lawyer and don't need the system at all, the system works okay for them. Obviously, they can hire the lawyer of choice. It's people in the middle who are often in the hardest spot, where they can't qualify for legal aid services but they can't afford a retainer for private counsel. These contribution agreements, I think, are very important, and I'd like to know if those are being used across the country.
I think you said 7% of the funding to legal aid is from the clients themselves. I'd like to know a bit more about what's being done in order to encourage contribution agreements to be used for those people who fall in the middle.