Absolutely.
From the research point of view, I think it's wonderful; the Nova Scotia government has been working with our colleagues in Halifax on the early intervention project that Suzanne was referring to. An ethicist gave them advice that a lottery system was the most equitable way to provide the service, because people know that the more advantaged families somehow manage to move their way up the wait list.
Wait lists actually disadvantage the disadvantaged even more. So the lottery system was fairest. However, they've developed a system that they're evaluating and that has been rolled out effectively in all parts of the province. I think it's a program that should be available across the country. It's a fabulous model that Susan Bryson and Isabel Smith have worked together on, and it contains the same strategies we're using in our early intervention studies across the country. So there is a pattern there; it just needs to be available to everybody.