The most pressing need is always a difficult question. The group the studies are illustrating right now as having the most acute and highest levels of poverty are working-age singles. I say that without taking away from what Ann is recommending around the further investment in the Canada child tax benefit, which I think is a very important program, but in many ways the working-age single adults have been neglected. As well, people with disabilities, newcomers to the communities, people who are outside of the family--their levels of poverty actually have grown. They really are the group that did not share in the economic prosperity of the last decade, and we're seeing that in terms of growth in caseloads for social assistance.
The WITB that was actually introduced recently I think was an important toe in the door. The further enrichment and investment in that particular program is important.
In terms of what John was arguing around, we can't forget the importance of the Canada social transfer and the social assistance levels in this country, many of which remain very low. Poor singles and people with disabilities are confined in those programs at below-poverty incomes.
Those are two very key investments that I think are important to make.