I think this is a very important thing, this whole idea of cooperative development and how you make it happen, especially given the fact that the model is not well understood in business schools and by economists. If we look at Canadian history, we see there are two really good examples. One is the co-op housing model where you had co-op housing resource groups across the country developing very successful housing cooperatives, and that model worked very, very well. And in Quebec you have the regional cooperative development organizations that specialize in developing cooperative businesses. That works very, very well, and that's why the cooperative movement is stronger in Quebec than it is in the rest of the country.
You see that as well when you go to Italy or Spain. Again, you see these cooperative development organizations that are specialized and understand the dynamics of cooperative business, understand how to make them work, and operate with collaboration from agricultural co-ops if the project is an agricultural one, or industrial co-ops if it's an industrial one. I think we need to look at how we create a network like that right across the country, not just in Quebec. I salute Quebec for what it's done. It's an excellent example.