I appreciate that.
Ms. Callahan, in the transition to that, we talk about food prices. The cost of the carbon tax adds to the trucking bill, adds to the grocery bill. When you check out at the grocery store, it has your tax lines on it. It doesn't have a carbon tax line. That is baked into the price of food inflation, which you alluded to among housing and other things.
I would say that we want to try to humanize, as well, particularly with regard to seniors, the impacts that inflated food costs are having. You said in your opening comments that seniors are having to cut back. We heard in Fredericton about seniors cutting their medications in half and stretching them out as an example of how bad it's gotten.
Can you talk a little bit about the carbon tax impact, whenever we have food inflation, and what exactly seniors are having to do to make ends meet?