Okay. I think part of the challenge is this. I farm out in the Brandon area, two hours west of here, and we have Assiniboine Community College. They have trades there, and what I couldn't get over, especially during the boom from 2012 to 2014, was how the trades were full. There were people lined up to get into school, to try to get their trades, to get their apprenticeships, and to get working in the workforce. They could not get into school. Yet the workforce and everybody in industry were screaming for skilled people. Where's the barrier?
I went back and I asked the community college, why are there so many barriers? Why don't you open up an empty school, or an empty industry place, and get the trades going, like welders, for heaven's sake. It doesn't take rocket science. You're talking about primary types of skills. In agriculture, we're full.
I don't know where the breakdown is. Identify where there's a need, get those institutions up to speed, and get them training.
We have people screaming from the north. There are skills that are needed up there to live. How come they're not getting educated? Why not? We need an infrastructure to support that as well, and that's why we talk about digital infrastructure. If we're not going to move away from our rural areas, we need that fundamental support and that backbone to support Canada in 2016.