I want to focus in a bit on that carbon tax, but not just specifically for food, because you made this argument about it affecting the supply chain and having a compounding effect.
When a single mom, as you said, is disproportionally affected by the carbon tax and the higher food inflation, it doesn't factor in the fact that for her to drive her kid around to sports or school, when she's filling up her gas, that price has gone up too because of the carbon tax. Also, the cost for her to heat her home has gone up.
Do you think all of these are factors that are also affecting those vulnerable people you mentioned?