Certainly. Hats off to you. I know your family puts a lot of effort and a lot of time into making your nephew's life as wonderful as possible.
I'm in the same situation. My favourite nephew has significant special needs. My job is to teach him Portuguese and to sing to him. I don't speak Portuguese well nor do I sing well, but he's happy when I do it.
As a take-home message, I guess, attached to the role of families in this, is that if you were to replace them—not that you ever would, of course—but if you want to put a number on how many paid staff it would take to replace what families and friends are doing for people with disabilities and seniors and so on across the country, we're upwards of five million or six million staff that we don't have budgets for and that we don't have room for in our economy. People are otherwise consumed with other jobs.
These families are doing yeoman's work. I would argue that one of the roles of the state is to support families with the help they need to look after the people they love.
I do hope everyone will join us in our call to make this strategy real and see some good stuff coming out soon.