First of all, congratulations on the tabling of that report. It's really important that we have the conversations around the care economy, framed as it has been in the work that all of you have done. Again, congratulations.
What we've been doing at ESDC—and I'll ask officials to chime in—is really putting a health care-care economy lens as a priority as we've rolled out, particularly postpandemic but during the pandemic as well, whether it's a sectoral workforce solutions program, the health care-care economy as a priority or foreign credential recognition.
We just closed a call for proposals specifically related to credentialing of care workers. We are working on our commitments around personal support workers, to which I'm sure someone in the room there can add a bit more detail. For ECE workers, our child care agreement with every province has commitments embedded in terms of the training and the work conditions for early childhood educators. Then, of course, there are the commitments to age at home and to have dignity in long-term care.
I would say that all of this is coming together because of the evolution of the way we talk about and value care work, driven by a lot of the work that all of you have been doing, but that has been happening across the country. As someone who has worked in the disability space for so very long, it's a very exciting framing to the conversation because it adds such a significant amount of respect and dignity.