There are a couple of other things. If you're going to embark on that kind of study--and I'm not sure about it either--so many issues are looked at in silos: employment here, transportation over there, training somewhere else, access to assistive devices somewhere else. That doesn't work, and that's part of the problem.
If you're going to look at it, there are issues like transportation and the fact that as a resident of Ontario I get access to 75% payment for a lot of the technical aids I may require or use. If in exercising my mobility rights under the charter, I leave Ontario and go to many other provinces in this country, my entitlement to coverage for assistive devices does not go with me.
There is a need for a greater federal role in helping us get those sorts of things. It must be looked at in a more holistic manner, if we're going to do anything about the chronic unemployment and under-employment that so many people with disabilities continue to confront.