First of all, I didn't do it because when the bill was put in, some costs were already done, and I don't believe those numbers are correct. When we look at the 360 hours and we look at the best 12 weeks, I don't really think they go to $1.5 billion, but let's say we pass this and it's $1.5 billion.
We still have a surplus of $2 billion. The reason it will cost that is that the government has cut it to that point. The government is the one that cut employment insurance and now says it will cost a lot to bring it up.
Do you know the human and social costs it creates? Does the government ever evaluate what it does in the field, what it does in a region where suicide is up because people cannot feed their families? The kids go to school...when the employment insurance cuts happened, the schools said the number of people going to school with nothing in their lunch boxes went up 25%. Would you ever care about the human costs?