So that may be of interest to you folks that are here from the investment industry, as well, because there aren't very many investments out there that give you that kind of return.
Judy, I think your question about how we help the Conservative members understand the child care dilemma that we face really goes to people's familiarity with the kind of child care that we're talking about.
Mr. Pallister, you're here from Central Region. You know very well the excellence of the child care program that has developed here in Manitoba. It has developed over the years through various partnerships between the federal and provincial government, but overarching that has been a framework in which there has been broad agreement across Manitoba about what kinds of services we want for children and families.
So here in Manitoba, we have a system that includes part-time care for families that are at home. We have extended-hour care. We have seasonal care. We have care in northern and first nations communities, work site programs, etc. So we have a much broader base of public support and familiarity with that.
Sadly, grown-ups lose the ability to imagine something they've never seen, unlike children, who are great at pretending all the time. So I would really say, while the Conservative members are imported here, they should take the opportunity to maybe visit some of the excellent child care programs that are right here in this community. We have an extended-hour program--actually, the director is sitting in the audience--right here in Portage that's been running for many years to meet the needs of families for evening care. Come by for a visit and really take the opportunity to see what excellent kinds of programs are at work in this province for rural families and for families that need extended care, part-time care, etc.