One of the major initiatives of the federal government at present is this substantial reduction in child care fees that most Canadians with young children will have already seen and will continue to see over the course of 2023, with the provinces fully implementing their version of these plans by the end of this year. This is the first step, and most Canadians in most cities should see a roughly 50% reduction in fees in most cases. It's not universal, but it will be close. This is step one of the longer-term plan of $10 a day, which is still a couple of years off. That being said, that will be the most obvious implementation of this plan.
What will become clearer in 2023 is that we need a lot more spaces to fulfill this increased demand, and the funding for those spaces is not entirely in place at present. The big issue is not so much capital, which is to say the physical space, but, as you alluded to, the staff—the ability to retain trained staff and train new staff—so we can actually staff these spaces. This was a big issue during the pandemic as staff left the profession, just as we're seeing in other professions, so we advocate in the alternative budget for substantial additional investments on the infrastructure front. This isn't on the fee front. This is building more spaces, and primarily around the training with $2 billion—