Thank you—no pressure there.
Basically, to sum up, we've talked a lot about the need for economic security of women. Women are basically the caregivers and nurturers, even now, of families.
There are many anecdotes. One that struck me in particular was a Photovoices project, which I will include in a later brief. It shows a woman and her home. There aren't even doors on her cupboards, she's in low-rental housing, trying to care for a schizophrenic son, and she herself has no legs.
These are the kinds of things that are happening. Even in my household, I have my husband, who lives with ADHD and depression. We also had another roommate whom we took in, a man who was living in the only accommodation he could afford, which was a basement suite in an apartment. It was in an actual apartment building, but the sewer kept backing up in it. It took us five years to convince him to come up out of that and live in light and decent surroundings.
Those are the kinds of supports that disabled women need: housing, child care, transportation—think of Maslow's hierarchy of needs. Those basic investments will lead people to explore and will empower them to try to make something different happen.
I think there's no better investment than the investment in the Canadian people, and that includes the disabled women of this country.
Thank you.