Yes, it's been costed and I have the auditor's statements. I can submit them to the committee if need be.
It could work a number of ways. It could work like the home renovation tax credit. Remember how that spurred spending, people would go to the retail store and they got a percentage of what they spent back on their income tax. So you spend $1000 travelling to where the work is, potentially you get 5% of that back, or 10% or 15% of that back, as a tax credit at the end of the year. It's not even as a dollar-for-dollar deduction on income.
We're looking for the committee's input as well to structure this on how we think it could work. You could also give someone the last two weeks of their EI first and they could use that to fly or to get on a train to travel to a job site at a certain distance. But a tax credit is probably, in our view, the easiest way to do it, against expenses that someone lays out to go to work.