Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm sorry that I'm switching with Mr. Aubin. I had a bridge issue—people know me around here as the building person.
Before, when I had a real job, I was a PSW. I used to work on behalf of persons with disabilities as an employment specialist. We recently had a juvenile diabetes group lobby the Hill here. One of the things was the disability tax credit. What's interesting about that was in 2002, when I arrived here, it was to be cut by the Treasury Board at that time. John Manley was the finance minister who was being advised to cut it. We ran a long campaign with Malcolm Jeffries, who has passed away by now. He was wonderful. We were able to stop it.
Can you highlight the difficulty about the disability tax credit? Even saving it from being cut, it really doesn't cover very much of your costs. Could you especially connect that to how that type of access and resources for prevention could be really worthwhile for our health care system, where we'll make more money—let alone the ethics of doing the right thing—with a little bit more support for people to be preventative in their daily and working lives?