As you know, we live in a vexingly wonderful, decentralized federation and one of the huge benefits of Canada's decentralized federation is that we have the opportunity for experimentation at the subnational level, at the provincial and territorial level. We have a huge amount to draw from in terms of excellence and challenges in delivery.
The federal government has indicated it would like to take a substantial role in increasing the amount of spending to provinces and territories to build a system. What we need to do, therefore, at the very first instance, is work with the provinces and territories to scale and talk about the best practices that we have seen. We have some very good examples. Quebec is one that is very often pointed to, for very good reasons. B.C. is doing some incredible work with its $10-a-day child care pilot. Newfoundland has been doing some great work, as have P.E.I. and Nova Scotia. We have great experience in the country. What we need to be doing when we're talking about building a system to address that unevenness is to be scaling that up, but also thinking about it as a model where, as I said, we fund the services in child care. That bypasses a lot of the conversation in the policy nexus—