Yes. I'll give you a real-life example of one. SNAP is for girls aged six to 11 actually. It's a Canada-developed model. Another is called Spirit. It's for girls aged 11 to 15. It's actually in Calgary, in junior high schools. It's really to assist them.
They're young girls who have limited resources. They have many personal issues. Obviously, they've had many different conflicts already in their lives. To Shirley's point, you actually want to have interventions before the police are called. These programs in junior high are really focused on how to prevent them from coming into conflict with the law, and give them some stability, tools, and interventions to become more resilient, in order to avoid that path that we don't want them to go down.
It's actually in four junior high schools, in grades 7 to 9. The school identifies a population that it's worried about, some girls who they think, without quick intervention, will end up going down a different path. The schools help identify who should be in the program, and they work with the program in place. It's called Spirit, which stands for “girls identifying real life solutions” to their problems. It will run for three to five years. At the core it has education, recreation, mentorship, and female role models, which goes to the point that Shirley made earlier. Female role models, regardless of what the profession is, are critical to a number of these programs for young women and girls.