Thank you for the question.
It's not something we typically tackle, although, as you can well imagine, it comes up all the time, because people in our programs have the same issue of child care as many of us across the country do. We don't particularly address it in the sense of coming up with solutions, because it's a little bit outside of our purview. But one of the challenging issues that we face is that we want to be as upfront and clear to our participants—I'm talking women in particular here—about the nature of systemic discrimination in this country. For them, it's an additional burden. I may face the same discrimination, but I'm not here as a new Canadian. We address those issues in conversation. I feel it's really imperative for people to be alert to that. I don't want to have happen what once happened. It was actually a man who said, “Because I have not been successful here in Canada, I feel that I have let down Canadian immigrants.“ I thought it was an extraordinary comment that somehow he felt that he represented a group of people. However, as you know, it is not an atypical experience for women. We often feel that, somehow, we are either the token woman or seen as a representative of something. We then feel concerned if we don't meet whatever this externally imposed standard is.
I try to be very upfront with our participants about the issues of systemic discrimination, but in a way that does not discourage them. Clearly, they need to go in with their eyes wide open, but they also need to avoid taking onto themselves some kind of additional burden of blame that may come because they feel they've got, as it were, a double whammy: they're women—they maybe, in fact, have a triple burden in their mind—they're racialized women, and they're new Canadians.
In short, while we don't address the issue directly, I certainly try to alert people to the challenges they face, and to the fact that they may indeed have a double or triple burden. I try to do it in a way that does not undermine their confidence because, ultimately, if I do that, then we haven't been successful.