I just want to say that there's not one rural woman. I am glad there are women who are doing well in rural communities, and I appreciate the opportunity to speak to the lives of those who are not. And I think it's all of what you've said. It would be making things as flexible as possible so that the woman herself can look at her community, at what she may have access to, and then access it. So certainly it would be support for child care.
Transportation is a really large issue that needs to be dealt with. So certainly it would be doing more things online, providing different kinds of supports. I think in the community it's just being innovative around retraining. If there are women in a community who may be interested in the same program, let's see some study groups, with some tutoring attached to some online work through universities and community colleges. Let's encourage women to take up the kinds of occupations that are not low-paying. Often with the programs that women are funded to go into, they are going into occupations that are still low-paying, so we need to look at that as well.
It really requires going to the various areas and the different communities and really asking women what would help them get to where they need to go and then making a program that's flexible enough to help them do that.