I can answer very quickly.
Thank you for that. That's great: 47 years. You've seen the change in Canada as well.
Exactly: I think rural Alberta wants to prosper by immigration. We've seen that in the urban centres.
I think it's really about developing that two-way street. It's really about showing how communities can prosper and, for them, knowing that the cultural diversity they can experience in rural Alberta and rural Canada has opportunities for those communities to grow as well. Raising the awareness that those opportunities are available for both parts is great, I think, as is showing and really showcasing rural Canada as an opportunity for that immigration and for building those communities.
The fact is, I think that if you create that framework to bridge that gap, there are fantastic examples. I wish I had more time. The rural and northern immigration pilot- really is bridging those communities to immigrants and to opportunities. The YMCA of Northern Alberta is looking at settlement services for the Wood Buffalo region and making it more welcoming and understandable and making sure that they're having those conversations. I think there are examples out there, and really taking those successes and looking at them on a larger scale I think is an opportunity.