I was just going to add, Chair, that I met recently with my provincial counterparts of deputy ministers of social services, and we had visiting us and speaking to us the members of the panel the minister referred to earlier. One of the members of that panel, Mark Wafer, was describing his extensive visits across the country with colleagues in business. He will go and meet and talk with just about any business or other group that invites him, and his analysis was that the continuing disadvantage or blockage, if you like, to the increased take-up of persons with disabilities in business is the continuing mythology and fear about the costs to the business of recruiting persons with disabilities of all kinds.
He has made the case extensively—and that's what the forum is intended to facilitate—about the kind of productivity increases to businesses as a result of the employees they recruit; the improvements, the advantages to the brand of the business; and the potential for engagement with customers when they see, behind the counter or on the floor, individuals working for the company who have been recruited notwithstanding their disabilities.
It was a very impressive presentation, and those are the kind of advances that we need to see in the marketplace.