Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'll follow Mr. Marston.
I'd like to go to you, sir, and I want to talk a little bit about poverty. I want to understand. When we hear those statistics, they're staggering. I don't think there's anybody who doesn't look at poverty, the type of poverty you're looking at: the homelessness, on the reserves, single moms, often people who really don't have much of a chance. And they didn't create these problems. These were problems they were either born into or sometimes circumstance. But isn't it true too that many of the statistics are moving targets? What I mean by that is aren't there many people in those statistics who are in flux, their lives are actually improving, and when we check them five years later we see they have improved? As I said, I'm not talking about people who were institutionalized at one time but now for whatever reasons, right or wrong, were opened into society. Is that a fair assessment?