A couple of years ago the Manning Centre had a conference here in Ottawa. They talked about government delivery of service and about some of the challenges we see today with slow growth and some of the demographics in the country. They talked about a fourth option for delivery of service, the community, and trying to motivate communities to work together. For instance, you might have people in a Rotary Club who would be willing to donate their time to the seniors centre to help them out there, or provide some sort of assistance to seniors, or even child care or whatever, just because the cost of this service delivery is overwhelming and quite frankly, we just can't afford it. We can't even imagine going into debt to try to sustain that as we see some of the examples in Europe that have failed.
Could you see initiatives at the federal level with regard to one of the suggestions that I think came out of the Manning Centre, giving a tax credit to people who gave of their time? They wouldn't be paid, but they would have a tax credit and those types of things. Does that come under social finance, or do you think that's a different concept and it's more looking at enterprise?