Yes, I agree with you. I think the problem, though, comes back to that question of whether we value our rural communities. If we do, we have to really look at what's happening there, including out-migration and the exodus of young people and, along with that, the resultant restructuring of family.
What's happening now in rural communities, particularly as it impacts women, is really significant, because women are trying to do not only paid work but all of the primary family care as well as all of the volunteer work in the community, and as well, they are trying to provide services that have left the community because of centralization and population-based policies. A lot of our thinking is urbanized. So the kinds of policies and solutions that we're coming up with are urban-centric, and they do not fit our rural communities well.
One of the things we have been thinking about and looking at is the possibility of something like a guaranteed annual income that would allow people to stay in communities and begin to rebuild communities because they could continue to afford to live there. Particularly when we are looking at some of the larger issues around trying to establish local food systems, etc., there are some possibilities now--