Right.
I apologize, Kimberley, but I'm wondering if you could send that comment to the committee. I'm short on time, and I just want to make sure I get some more questions in, if I can.
Mr. Villeneuve, I appreciate you being here. I can tell you that when I first met my wife, she was a pediatric intensive care nurse with the Hospital for Sick Children. She became an intensive care nurse and flew on the air ambulance at Sunnybrook in Ontario. She has extensive experience and spent a lot of time training, as did I. I realize and recognize all the training that goes into our health care workers, in particular when we are looking at long-term care.
The Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion stated this:
We may create, working with the Homecare Workers Associations of Canada, some kind of training so that people who aren't in those jobs now—maybe people who are at home and unemployed—can take a shortened version of this training and be able to perform the less complicated tasks that are required at these homes.
I'm wondering what your thoughts are on that and where you see that with health care workers in these long-term care facilities.