That's a great question, and if you do the math on this, it boggles your mind because it seems that the money is there. If you consider the testimony we heard that they were trying to create upwards of 100,000 positions, with up to 500 hours per position, if you paid those folks $15 an hour, the highest minimum wage in Canada, so these folks would be making at or above minimum wage, that would be about $750 million. It leaves a whole lot of money for administration. You could even pay them a bit more than that if you wanted.
It really boggles my mind that it had to be done this way, and it's interesting, because it seems that because they didn't pay these workers properly, so much of this money had to be put into things such as getting teachers to recruit people or getting the agencies to promote it.
I think if you had just paid people a decent wage, you would have avoided a lot of those challenges.