No, in fact, that's part of why the Auditor General is encouraging us to pursue this work. The work that was done in Alberta was done in Alberta only. We tried to work with the coroners' offices to try to get access to that type of data from across the country. The responses we had--that was in 2000, if I'm correct--were that they were not necessarily collecting in every jurisdiction data about the first nations status or Inuit status of the people they were registering as deaths. So they didn't have the information for us to collect, to access.
We've tried, by hiring a specialist in this area, to see if we couldn't do a specific study, and the answer came back that the data was not available. We're going back again this year to try to find a way. We're going to look specifically at what was done in Alberta so many years ago to see if we can't try to use the same type of methodology across the country. But we don't know. It's under provincial-territorial authority.