This was in the case of the caregiver tax credit. This was in the case, for example, of adults who would be in their working years and unable to work. That sort of thing.
In the case of my spouse, someone has to be at home and caring for this older adult. The challenge is that we have an older adult who has very high needs and who would otherwise be in long-term care and a burden to the system in other ways, and we have an individual who is able to care for that individual. We're just looking at modest ways, so there could be a different perspective on income splitting, or there could be a number of different ways that we could be looking at this.
We're asking the government to consider that the refundable caregiver tax credit is a very small amount, actually, when we've modelled it. We're looking at innovative ways to respect and appreciate that there are individuals who are giving up that time. We have to respect and understand that there's a loss of work hours. This is going to have long-term impacts on their Canada pension benefits at some point, and these kinds of things. We really need to look at this from that perspective.