Sure. It makes sense. I understand that makes sense.
I'd like to go on to a few other things, but I also want to go to Ms. Diocson for a moment, if I could, with respect to the live-in caregivers.
I know the issue very well, and I understand it. I'm going to ask you some things to see whether you think they would work. I think you also made some of the same suggestions.
First of all, a lot of them are nurses. There is now a demand for nurses in our society. We have a shortage of professional nurses. First of all, could we not make sure that women coming from the Philippines no longer have to go through the live-in caregiver program? They should be able to apply through professional nursing. Those who are here could find a way to upgrade. Have you looked at some of that? It seems to me those are two solutions or two ways of looking at it.
On the third solution, if I can throw this at you, I think you alluded to it or mentioned it. The live-in program is a major problem because they're isolated. They don't get to take English as a second language. They can't do training.
Perhaps we could open up the box and have them not as live-in caregivers but as live-out caregivers. In other words, they're caregivers, but they'd actually go home to their apartments, to their sister's, or to whomever they're with at the end of the day. They wouldn't actually be trapped, and the employers wouldn't have that much power over them. It would seem to me that some of that might help tremendously. Would it be something that you would recommend to us?