We certainly look at a number of issues. I haven't had the opportunity to look at the presentation you're referring to, but with access to employment insurance for part-time workers, as noted in the remarks, it depends on the region you live in. So there are some regions with a lower entry requirement, and it could be as little as eight hours per week over the course of a year. In an area of very high unemployment, eight hours per week for a year would ensure access to EI. That goes up to about 14 weeks in the areas of lowest unemployment. So that's the range of hours required to get into the EI program. And as noted, it's one of the fundamental principles of EI that the benefit you're entitled to is based on the income you've earned during that employment, since it's insuring the actual earnings you had. So the benefit level tracks the actual amount of earnings you had.
I would note that there is a built-in feature that raises the level of benefit, though. The maximum insurable earnings increases on an annual basis, which is the basis on which benefits are established, and it's gone up. It was $39,000 and it's now in the $42,000 range. That's the amount of earnings that are considered insurable, and the benefits grow in accordance with that level.
These are the types of issues we look at pretty closely.