Thanks very much, Ms. Sidhu, for the really great question.
It's very complicated, so it's hard to answer in a short couple of minutes, but there are a couple of things. First of all, Canadians, and certainly nurses and CNA, do look to the federal government for strong leadership, and one of things that federal government has traditionally done well is convene. I think there's a convening function to bring people together. We're a bit leery of five more years of talk, because we've identified many of these problems for years. Some of them are as simple as four-bed rooms or single-bed rooms with a Jack and Jill bathroom. It spreads like a brush fire through those kinds of places.
Some of it's old, outdated infrastructure, so if we had a modernization of the idea of what long-term care looks like.... In places like Sick Kids and many other hospitals, now they're going to basically all single rooms because of this very problem. The infrastructure of long-term care looks like 1955. It just has not kept up, and it might have been fine when people were walking around in their clothes and driving to do their shopping from those facilities, but it's not now.
I think we turn to the federal government for the convening functions, the strong sense of levelling the playing field and the standards across the country. As a Canadian, what can I expect in Saskatchewan that I should also expect in New Brunswick? It's a bringing together, development of standards function to set the expectations.