Can you look into that? Here's what I'm concerned about. I used to work in the not-for-profit sector as an employment specialist for persons with disabilities and youth at risk, and I was a city councillor as well. We watched the universities and colleges have to struggle with income coming in. First of all, there was a far greater outreach to the provincial and federal governments for greater access to capital for various programs and services. Then there was outreach to municipalities, especially related to sports, culture, and facility infrastructure. Then there was outreach to business. We saw others lose that traditional base of support of philanthropy in communities because it was being tapped into, so not-for-profit organizations, charitable organizations, lost traditional partners. For example, automobile manufacturing has gone from fourth in Canada in a community like mine, to tenth overall. Also, many products and services are moving south because of different policies.
Then we've watched tuition go to some of the highest levels, if not the highest levels. I'm wondering what work is being done to look at the cost of the product that you have a student go through and exit; the cost of financing that investment, because it is an investment; and then of remuneration in the market, and how long it takes to pay back. I fear what a lot of people are doing is similar to what my partner and I did. We waited to have children till later in life to pay off student debt and buy a home and get into the economy in a different way. I worry that this been further exacerbated 20 years later.