I think our labour market demand and supply issues are at a crossroads in our country. We think all levels of government need to spend time working together on those solutions. When they do, wonderful things are going to happen, as demonstrated through our Workplace Partners Panel, where we had more than several hundred stakeholders commenting on these issues from an industry perspective. Industry needs to be leading the way in which the system is organized, and that includes both business and labour, but we think there's a tremendous amount of work for you to do with your provincial and municipal counterparts in terms of how to best do that.
In Saskatchewan in particular, because the federal government spends an extraordinary amount of money on services for aboriginal people and we have the highest level of aboriginal population—not the highest number, but the highest level—obviously we know that will need to be done in an even more highly coordinated strategic fashion in the future. That has not been particularly successful in the past. It needs to be in the future, or we're going to be dealing with even more social and political problems than the labour market problems that we currently see today.
That's the message I would leave.