I just want to add something to your question there.
In Peel there are there are about a million people. I forget how many students there are in Peel, but there are 32 high schools in the Peel board. Out of 32 high schools, five teach manufacturing. Out of those five, I can guarantee you for sure that two consider manufacturing to be wood products--not metal, not plastics, not anything like that. I don't think there's one high school in Peel, other than our school, that teaches anything about plastics.
You have to look at the population. Five classes on manufacturing is what, a couple of hundred students? What are we doing? People are complaining about skills. If you look at any board in Ontario, I think you're going to find the same problem.
As well, the equipment in those shops is obsolete. I'm 46 years old, and in many of the shops the equipment is the same thing that was there when I was in high school. So we need to upgrade the technology and we need to upgrade the skills. We need to spend money to make money.