Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, colleagues.
I want to start by saying thank you to Mr. Wood and the Canadian Trucking Alliance for raising the profile of the Driver Inc. model. It not only avoids taxes, but also robs drivers of the benefits they're entitled to.
It seems to me like this is an opportunity to have parties work together. The governing party has put a pilot program in place that the Trucking Alliance is looking to see rolled out more widely, and it's clear that opposition parties want to see this done too. It's rare these days that we see points of alignment here, and I wonder, amongst colleagues, if that's something we could work on together over the coming weeks.
I want to say thank you to Mr. Cochrane, particularly for his advocacy on the Canada disability benefit and on getting it fixed, along with addressing the housing crisis by doubling the supply of affordable housing.
My question is for Mr. Klein and Ms. Asghar.
When it comes to the youth climate corps that you've advocated for, you mentioned that the U.S. has already, of course, put this into place earlier this year through the American Climate Corps. You mentioned the price tag being about a billion. That sounds like a lot, but we know that if we put a windfall profit tax on oil and gas, we could raise $4.2 billion a year, as Mr. Cochrane also called for.
Can either of you speak to the lessons we can learn from the American Climate Corps on what has worked there over the last few months and also speak to the economic impacts of 20,000 young people in full-time work related to the climate economy, whom we're going to need going forward?
What should my colleagues know about the economic impact of a youth climate corps in the midst of a climate crisis? It's the kind of big idea that I think we need, as you said, Mr. Klein, at the pitch and the pace we're at right now. Would one of you like to comment on that in about 45 seconds?