Thank you very much.
I want to thank all three of you for excellent presentations.
I know very much about farm women and the issues they face. I was Secretary of State for the Status of Women in 1996 and spent a lot of time speaking to farm women. As a result, this came about: the ability for farm women to be able to talk about their economic reality, their social reality, and the isolation that they face and what happens when they become seniors.
I think it's a pity that this, which was an extraordinarily important document to help us to understand the complexity of immigrant women's lives, of farm women's lives, or rural women's lives, is now cancelled. This will no longer be available, this policy research fund. I think that is an extraordinarily devastating thing for women in this country, because it brought together academic research and real-life research for the first time. The two collaborated to be able to come up with some good solutions and some real answers.
I was going to ask you about your ability to have access to quality child care and to early childhood education, but I think Jean already asked you that question. But I do want to talk about the issue of access itself.
In Prince Edward Island you had two child care centres that are no longer there, and it was a small community. In places like Saskatchewan and in certain farms in the Prairies where there are huge distances, I think there needs to be a very innovative way to have access to early childhood education and to child care.
I know the problem with farm women is that you are neither fish nor fowl; you tend to fall between the cracks, and always have. You're not considered to be women in the paid workforce. You're considered to be stay-at-home moms, when you're not really. You're not staying at home. Somebody has to look after your kids while you are out there on your acreage doing work. This is a real problem that I would like to see us address.
The issue of seniors' pensions is one that has always concerned me, not only for farm women but also for senior immigrant women, who have often come to this country--as Lucya knows very well--and who have been babysitting their families, doing that unpaid work that they have had to do within the home, for which they get no recognition.
I would really like to hear you tell me how each one of you feels about the concept of having some sort of pensionable benefit that values the unpaid work that women in Canada do--farm women, immigrant women who take care of their children. And I would like to find out how we can structure that. Part of it may address some of the pensionable benefits for farm women. So I would like to hear about that.
The second thing I would like to ask a question about is the Wheat Board.
I note, Karen, that you've been trying to speak to that. I'd like to hear you finish it, please, because it hugely impacts on your economic viability.
Thank you.