That actually raises the much broader question about the way we organize health services. If you imagine Ottawa, there isn't anybody in Ottawa whose job it is to be responsible for all the initiatives that have an impact on people's health.
We don't have any locus of management in our health system. It's not like they've got a pot of money and can decide it would make more sense to subsidize ramps in people's houses than it would to do X, Y, or Z. Nobody has the control over reallocating money, and that's a big part of the problem in terms of the way we organize ourselves to look after people's needs.
I think the work that human rights commissions have done on disability have not been focused on elderly and chronic. On the positive side, there are benefits in the obligations that public spaces have for them, but that will not get at the issue of the adjustment of private spaces.
Who is going to pay for these kinds of questions becomes the issue. It helps their health. We save money if they're there. Whether it's a private or a public responsibility is going to be the debate on many issues over the next decade.