To address the law school point first, I think there is an interesting and growing movement around clinical education and what that means for access to justice in the country. In B.C. in particular, as I said, we started the Rise Women's Legal Centre, in partnership with UBC Law. It is UBC students who primarily staff the clinic, along with two staff lawyers. I see a huge niche there for law students.
It's not pure efficiency. These are students who are learning. There's a dual access to justice goal. There's meeting individual client needs, but if that was your only goal, lawyers would be more efficient. There's also the secondary goal of teaching new lawyers how to meet community needs and what it means to practise family law and to actually understand the gendered issues, particularly the gender-based violence issues that underlie a lot of family law. So I do see a significant need there.
You asked me something else. Sorry, I'm missing the second part of your question.