It might follow as a recommendation.
Ms. Jordan asked a question earlier that I've been holding onto this whole time, because you had only 20 seconds to respond.
Regarding the actual return on investment, I know that Daughters of the Vote was a great example. There were more women sitting in the House of Commons that day than have ever been elected to the House of Commons. Are there any procedures put in place to actually gauge whether this was successful? It was great to see everybody there that day, and it would be that much greater if 10 years from now they were sitting there professionally.
Is any type of longitudinal study being done on the community organizations that we're funding or on the initiatives that are going on, rather than having it be a feel-good thing for the government of the day? Is anybody studying this to make sure that the money being spent is resulting in change?