Probably they wouldn't have access to all these programs to get them back to work because they didn't get CPP in the first place. While I congratulate you on the programs that are getting people off CPP and back to work, my feeling is that your market is pretty narrow because there are only the people who got CPP in the first place.
You just have to look at the numbers. Currently, we have 291,000 beneficiaries of CPP, and last year we had 64,000 more applicants. If that happens every year—and we say yes to most of them—we'd be paying disability benefits to millions of people. But if we don't pay them, if we don't get them onto CPP disability, then we don't have a methodology for getting them back to work. Or are people on social assistance able to access those “get back to work” programs for the disabled?