There are. I don't have an exhaustive list, but actually over the last couple of days I've been looking at this. I have a 17-year-old and a 14-year-old daughter, for whom this is becoming a key question as well.
In looking at it, several provinces are doing that. Ontario has a new program that is targeted exactly at getting young women to enter the trades in non-traditional roles. I was looking through that on the website. I see Newfoundland and New Brunswick are doing that. I would be hesitant, for obvious reasons, to suggest which provinces are the leaders in that. But they all do that. Also, with respect to the LMDA and LMA moneys, we do an annual report on what they are doing to encourage that in various provinces.
You also have a number of private organizations, like the Canadian Council of Technicians and Technologies. I was just at the WorldSkills event in Calgary, and they had a booth there. Actually, I was drawn to it because they had this electric guitar--one of these rock guitar things--and if you played it you won a T-shirt, but it was only for young girls. It was called Go Tech girl. They're focusing on young women across Canada in grades 7 to 11, basically to show them that there are very meaningful careers in the technology trades out there. It was actually very impressive. They're funded by a number of private sector organizations, and I believe our department used to provide some minor funding to them.
There are all sorts of activities like that going on. When I look at them, they all seem to be bubbling up in the last year or two, so there are obviously some sorts of economic drivers going on behind this. I think there's a societal acceptance and all those kinds of things happening.