One of the things that we've talked about is kind of like what Mr. Vaughan talked about, not so much accommodating but preparing people for precarious employment, and that is providing training in entrepreneurship.
One of the things I noticed in the budget, and which is a really important and positive development, is lifelong learning for adult workers, with their being able to opt out and take a certain number of weeks of training. That is super important in the long term. It is important for people to be able to keep their jobs, whether they're permanent or precarious, that prepare them for training for other kinds of jobs, but I come back to the point of entrepreneurship.
At one of the round tables that we had, which was actually in Corner Brook, Newfoundland, somebody said something that I kind of knew, but she just said it so articulately, which is that we should have entrepreneurship training for all students, not just business students. If you go to the kinds of workers Mr. Vaughan was talking about in his riding, artists and so forth, they don't really often focus on entrepreneurship training, yet they are entrepreneurs, and we just expect them to make it through and they themselves expect to make it through. But as we go to more of a gig economy and self-employment—