The part that the Canadian Women's Foundation does well is raise the money and identify the programs. It's the community partners and programs that really do the work.
To go back to that example of the girls program in Fort McMurray, to echo what Ms. Stinson was saying, there's been a huge and profound impact from the economic development in Fort McMurray, where girls of nine, ten, and eleven are ending up being sexually exploited by men who are working in the community, who are very transient and who have money on their hands. The community identified that need.
So this is about working through the people who are already connected in a community. Most of the success comes from having that strong local partner. It's not having an external group come in and tell people what programming to do. In our programming with first nations youth, it's very much working through those pre-existing relationships in the communities, with people who are already connected, who have the traditional and moral authority, I think, that you're looking for in the community, versus coming in as the economic authority.