Sure.
Coming into this, as I said in the past, there hadn't been a lot of work done on the action plan, which I thought was good and bad because it gave me an opportunity to take hold of it from the very beginning and take ownership of it. I've enjoyed that process. We are coming to a conclusion. There will be one more aggressive round of consultations for Canadian women and Canadian organizations.
I have met with a number of Canadian women and had a conversation about what they'd like to see, from a federal perspective of what we can do in terms of the three pillars. They agree with the three pillars. They like the focus of economic security, ending violence against women—actually when I came in to this that pillar was called women's security and I made a decision to call it ending violence against women—and of course the one on leadership roles.
Even with my federal-provincial counterparts there has been significant support for the three pillars that's in line with the work they're doing provincially. I'd like to tell you more about it in depth, but I can't. But we are getting close. I'm very excited about the opportunity and what we'll be able to accomplish with this action plan.