Thank you, and I appreciate that.
A couple of weeks ago in my riding on a Saturday morning, I held an employment skills development workshop for my constituents. Service Canada came out. We had a number of other organizations that are doing some very good work on the ground. The feedback I got from the residents who came was that they actually didn't realize there were so many support services there to help unemployed people find work--both programs that the provinces deliver as well as what we're delivering federally.
Are we continuing to look at better ways to make sure that the unemployed know about the support services there? As you say, it's not just ones that we deliver directly as the federal government, but the ones in which we're partnering at a number of newcomer service agencies. My riding is quite multicultural, and they provide support services right from basic English language training to job preparation and preparing them for the job interview.
What are we doing or what are the plans to make sure that...? Other than the MP taking some action to do that, what else are we doing to make sure that if someone is unemployed and looking for work, looking to improve their skills, they know what's available? What are we looking at on a go-forward basis to make sure our residents know about the great support services that are out there and available?