First, on that issue of people with disabilities who are age 18 to 25--a critical point in people's lives--often services provided for children are more robust than they are for people with disabilities turning adult age. That is that critical transition time when people experiment with living on their own, get post-secondary education, and enter the labour market. Yet for people with disabilities, it is the point when the services actually shrink.
If we are looking at a labour market study--and I do say “if”, because I'm not quite sure that's the best piece of work to do--I would think one of the focuses might be on that age group of young people who are in transition from children's services to adult services, because there is a huge gap.
If we get it right, we get people good training and good education and good attachment when they're young. But if people have been out of the labour market for 15 years, retraining and getting people into the labour market at age 40 is hugely challenging; people have become dependent upon various social service systems. If we can find ways of addressing that population in a more robust way at ages 18 to 25, that would be a good thing to do.