As I said, it's a community development project. The costs are definitely related to the geographical scope of the project, so it's important to understand that $500,000 is not a lot of money when you're talking about 13 sites across the country. It is again, as I said, what we were doing, and it's a stepped process. Through that process of convening at the community level and through these research projects—as I said, community research that has a purpose is the best way to describe it—what we've been able to develop are.... The next stage of this project, which is what we're rolling out now and begins over the winter, will be workshops that are, again, at the community level, working with service providers and people who work with people with disabilities and women with disabilities, specifically, but also, of course, working with women with disabilities, themselves. It's a convening process to bring people together around the common objective of making change.
Also, education at the service and policy level is critical, along with educating women with disabilities about their rights.
I talked about the fact that women don't feel safe to disclose. Well, we have to put in place at the community level the resources so that they can disclose safely and know that, if they do choose to disclose, they'll be supported to follow through.
I really appreciate the fact that this opportunity through the community fund is allowing us to start to demonstrate how change happens. It isn't the answer, it's the beginning of the answer, and that answer lies with curriculum and education across, as I said, all the stakeholders.