The only thing I would perhaps add to that is thinking about the investment and recognizing that the federal investment that flows through to the provinces is trying to cover both education and health. These are competing demands. What we've seen is an emphasis on health care, which is another piece that Canadians highly value, and, in response, a message going to the institutions saying to be more entrepreneurial. I have no problem with entrepreneurship and, clearly, neither do my member institutions. They're bringing in huge amounts of money from partners, from the private sector and through philanthropic foundations.
Then, on top of that, international students were another piece of the financial puzzle. It did not stop costing good money to deliver post-secondary education, but choices were made at different levels of government. I would say that the one thing we've really seen from our sector is a huge move to being much more entrepreneurial about where those funds come from, and businesses that believe in the value of education are stepping up to the table. What we'd really like to see is a bigger, broader conversation about how governments can also do that.