If I can supplement with respect to the child care question, one of the things that we would like to see is a nationwide approach to child care, similar to the Canada Health Act. I think that's an excellent model to look at. What we need is high-quality child care across the country in rural, remote and northern communities from coast to coast. One of the challenges that we found—and Maya talked about this—is that there are recruitment and retention challenges right now, and currently, we're at a deficit. We actually don't have the number of care workers that we need, and that means communities are being left behind, and people are being left behind.
I think, absolutely, that a nationwide approach is necessary. It would help to create clarity around standards, around workforce development and also around recruiting for the future. Many economists have talked about how we are entering a period of slow growth, so that means we need all hands on deck. Every single barrier that is stopping labour market participation needs to be addressed, and child care is one of the biggest ones that we've seen in our work.
With respect to gender-based violence, again, there's an economic cost. It's also an infringement on human rights. The communities that we're part of across the country, they talk about.... We can't talk about economic recovery in a climate of hate, fear, discrimination and hate crimes. Those all have to be addressed for us to all get back to recovery so that we don't have that K-shaped recovery that has been talked about quite a bit, so that we don't see that disparity in building back better.
I'll leave it there. Thank you so much.