I think social investment also can be really good, but again here my honesty is going to bite me in the butt. There are some really good community-based organizations out there, but there are also some really bad ones. We call them “pamphlet programs”. They come out with a piece of paper and tell you the wonderful things going on in our community, but they do nothing for the people.
If you're honest in what you're looking for in the bond, there's nothing to be scared of. That was one of my biggest questions: are you scared of the bond? Absolutely I was not scared of the bond. The bond and my investors helped me get through the government bureaucracy when they tried to change the contract midstream. We had an agreement with the deputy minister to pay us so much extra for the moms, because we were getting nothing for them. Halfway through, they took that away without an explanation, but our investors stepped in and asked what was going on. We had one of our investors tell the minister at that time, “If you touch one word in this contract, we'll see you in court.”
If you always look at the worst, you can always find a reason not to do anything. I think when people are making an investment, investing in people, we should be looking at the reasons for doing it and how we can do it most easily and to the most benefit.
At the end of the day, we shouldn't be here to make a lot of money. We should be here to make a living. When you're looking at your investment, look at who's going to ultimately win. Is it going to be the community-based organization, the investor, or is it going to be our moms and our children in our case?
When we weighed all that, ultimately all this extra that is happening in Saskatoon, because we have a community that cares, far outweighs any risk we have in the bond.