Thank you.
The other sense I'm getting is on how you measure poverty and how you draw the line, so to speak. You mentioned the market basket approach as one measure. One good thing about that is that each region is a little different. It tells me that when you're dealing with poverty, there are a lot of circumstances that go into that. We have to be somewhat flexible yet objective.
As you mentioned, when you are dealing with a person there are a number of things you have to do. You need to deal with trust issues and a whole variety of things, but it boils down to the individual you're working with. Somehow you need to be able to allow the organizations to do what they need to do with the person to succeed.
How can we as a government set some objective standards that will allow you to take some risk and do some things, since otherwise you might not come up with a program such as the MOSH, which gets you to where you need to be? How do you quantify that? What do we need to do as a government to allow you to do the work you need to do?
Anyone can answer that.