Thanks for that.
Yes, the general working assumption is that the payment to the household—and we use the typical family of four in most of our examples—would be greater than the cost of the fuel charge to them.
The way it's structured in each of the jurisdictions, there's a base amount that applies to the first individual in a household. There's a secondary amount that is for a spouse or common-law partner, or in the case of a single parent it would apply with respect to the first child. There's a child amount, thirdly, that is simply multiplied by the number of children in a household.
If you look at that family of four in Ontario, for example, the basic amount is $154. The secondary amount is $77. The per-child amount is $38. In doing the math very quickly in my head, for a family with two adults and two children, you're looking at a little over $300 for that family of four in Ontario.
Did you want the numbers for Saskatchewan?