It's different, and I know for some of you it's like a broken record, and the department always says they agree with the recommendations. You want that to be more than an act of faith. You want to see results and you want to see changes. I think in what we have on the national outcomes, for example, we didn't wait for the results from the Auditor General's report.
To put it in context, the community well-being index was developed at the beginning of the century, to be honest. That was a time when the HDI was really popular internationally. You remember people were proud that Canada was scoring and ranking very high at the time. Some first nations, including the national chief at the time, said that Canada was not doing that well because there was a huge gap on reserves. People in the department at the time decided to ask if they could measure something comparable to the HDI that would allow them to see how we perform on the first nation side. That's what the community well-being index was.