I can comment personally. I saw Canal Flats, British Columbia, just a little bit north of where I live in the East Kootenays in southeastern British Columbia, lose its mill in 2015. It closed 180 direct jobs in the small community of Canal Flats, out of about 1,000 people who lived there. It's the proverbial one-horse town. There was one industry, and it closed. Those friends and family members had to either pick up and move, which is difficult, as you mentioned, or stay and keep their home there, and then they had to commute. They had to commute north to the mines, hours away, and then they were away from their loved ones. They were working one week in and one week out, or two weeks in and two weeks out.
That eliminates your hockey coaches. It eliminates your community supports. The tax base for the actual community is devastated. The effects are far-reaching. I think sometimes they're not measured by the human impact, especially on families and folks, when folks have to then travel to work instead of being home in their own beds every night.