Thank you, Ms. Sharp. I appreciate that.
Ms. Yalnizyan, you made some evocative statements, I thought, at the beginning when you spoke. We are trying to get our heads around gender budgets. In many ways, I think a lot of this is that we don't know quite how to start.
I've worked a fair bit in Africa over the years. With women's groups and others, we have signed all sorts of declarations with community leaders and others, and we come back a year later and find out that none of these things have been respected. Now that's Africa. In Canada, I know, with the Beijing signing in 1995 and other things, we're a fairly advanced country, and yet we seem to have trouble moving ahead on this ourselves.
So my question is this. People like me who are trying to get their heads around it kind of need a Gender budgeting for Dummies—I'm speaking about myself—something in which somebody could help us to get started.
You have mentioned four things. I think you mentioned post-secondary education, housing, pay equity, and the fourth was...?