The only thing I was going to add is that I think there's a bit of a chicken-and-egg piece, in the sense that Brad mentioned rural labour. Increasingly, the reason that highly talented young people choose not to live in rural Saskatchewan is that the public sector infrastructure, education and health, has deteriorated enough that it isn't as attractive a place to live, frankly, as a lot of other settings, and that's going to be an issue for economic development in a lot of areas.
A friend of mine once said, “Listen, I had three kids with master's degrees who all wanted to farm, and our farm was making money. But you know what? They all looked at it and said, there's no access for the things I want for my kids within a few miles of this place; we're gone.”
The economy tends to move to where it's a decent place to live, because there are a lot of mobile jobs in this world.