Thank you very much.
It sounds like you're doing some absolutely fantastic programming, especially at the local level. I'm very impressed.
The one thing I'm trying to do is see where the gaps might be. I noticed you said that out of 67 programs there are two that are focused on young children and girls. I think you said one of them was under the age of 12. The one that you mentioned for 11-year-olds to 15-year-olds in Calgary—which sounds like a fantastic program—is to prevent the girls from getting into conflict with the law. Understandably, most of these programs have to fall under crime prevention, but that makes the assumption that it is the youth who are doing this to other youth, and not necessarily that young people are becoming victimized by adults or people not known to them, because they're being exposed to this online.
I'm wondering if there is actually a gap in programming for that age group, for teenagers, for young girls and young women who are being victimized—not necessarily the cyber-bullying by their peers or by a boyfriend who takes pictures—but by adults.