Rural and northern communities are definitely very concerned about these issues, and workers in those communities, who have traditionally travelled for work, would like to stay in their home communities. We see that all the time. They would like to return to their home communities.
The regional tables and having the regional partners at the table, whether those are regional employers or regional governments, are going to be critically important to figuring out how investments can be utilized to actually create good community- and family-sustaining jobs. It cannot just be any job and it can't be a precarious job. It has to be a family- and community-sustaining job, so you need workers at the table. You need workers' input and workers' dedication and knowledge being brought to those conversations.