Thanks for the great observation. I would make a couple of comments.
In Prince Edward Island, you have a residential boom happening right now. A thousand workers are required. Meanwhile, in Newfoundland and Labrador, we have a surplus of workers. This is exactly why a skilled trades workforce mobility tax deduction would help, even in Atlantic Canada, for those workers in Newfoundland to potentially come to Prince Edward Island, rather than sometimes getting on a plane to go much further afield. Similarly, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, there are requirements for workers, and there's a surplus of workers in Newfoundland. It would really make sense to have that tax deduction in place to help with that.
In terms of standardization across the country, trades and trade regulations are in the purview of the provinces. We believe there should be more standardization right across the country, as long as that standardization is rising to the top and not going to the bottom. There is some pressure to try to deskill the trades. We do not support that. If there's going to be any kind of standardization, it needs to be at the higher lever, not the lower level.