Thank you.
And thank you both for being here today. They were very interesting presentations.
I'd like to ask Ms. Nicolle a little bit more about the International Day of the Girl. When Minister Ambrose came to the committee, she talked a little bit about the genesis of it, and the fact that, when she spoke to girls who had worked with Plan Canada about International Women's Day, many of them felt they couldn't relate to it because their problems were very much focused on girls—forced marriages, access to education, access to health care, forced genital mutilation. These are problems faced by girls, not women. She spoke very movingly, I think, about the need for that International Day of the Girl.
I want to know about the promotion of this initiative specifically. For example, you can walk along Sparks Street and see the information posters in the bus shelters, and we hear about it because we work here. But I'm wondering about how it's promoted in other areas of Canada. Also, is there anything we can do, as members of Parliament—not just those of us in this room, but all 308 members of Parliament? Is there something we can do through the promotional efforts we undertake every day? We send out flyers in our ridings. We have access, obviously, to families in our neighbourhoods. Are there things we can do or should be doing to promote this further? Or should it just be in schools?
I guess my first question is how is it promoted, and is there anything we can do to further promote it?