We know that $100 a month does not create child care. And certainly we work in rural, remote, and northern communities all across Canada, where even with this $100 a month going to every child of the appropriate age in the community, they're still losing ground, not gaining ground. We're doing extensive work in Rocky Mountain House, Alberta. We work with the Nisga'a First Nation in B.C. We work in Port-Au-Port, Newfoundland. All those communities are struggling, yet they have this $100 in their hands.
It is a wonderful income support, and certainly from our national think tank we would be the first to say, much like in aboriginal communities and impoverished rural communities, we welcome the $100 a month. It is not a national child care program. It does not create opportunities or options for child care for Canadian families.