Some of the infrastructure costs—and I'm going to steal some thunder from the speakers beside me.... We don't have to go out and build new things; we have to teach people to use the things they have. There are walking programs in my community, in every single shopping mall in Saskatoon. Those shopping malls are there. People go at seven o'clock in the morning, they go at seven o'clock at night, and they walk. Get people using the stairs. Make the stairwells safe; make them clean. We have some of that infrastructure. We simply have to re-educate people to the use of it.
That doesn't get to the question that was framed, in terms of our long-term-care needs and the needs of those with disabilities, but it does get to the broad general population and the fact that if we re-educate, we don't necessarily need a lot of high-cost investment in infrastructure. We have it already.