The age-friendly communities initiative, which was focused, as Claude has indicated, both internationally and domestically, is now in the roll-out process with interested jurisdictions. It basically provides a mechanism whereby seniors in communities together with other components of the community--the business sector, the non-government sector, the municipality, the municipal government, and so on--can look at those things that seniors themselves find helpful to their enjoyment of their community, wherever it is, or that may be a problem. It could be a lack of proper street repair, or it could be an environmental thing. We've talked a lot about falls and some of the things that contribute to that. It can be a whole range of things, but it's what those individual older community members think would be important to them.
Beyond that, it is an opportunity for them to have established in that process of dialogue possible areas that they can target to move on. Those things can be as simple as getting a bench between bus stops on a hill in Saanich, B.C., or it could be something more extensive that would require coordination between provincial and municipal governments with respect to snow plowing. The province might go through the middle of town and fill the sidewalks essentially with banks of snow. The roads are clear but the older persons or persons with disabilities or moms with carriages can't get across the street because it's just lying there.