It would be very cheeky of me to say that it's both, but that is in fact the answer. We need an overarching vision and connection for this solution. The federal government is well poised to play that role and to provide some additional funding and connection there. However, that needs to go hand in hand with the fact that it can't be an overarching blanket solution where we're going to do this one thing and it's going to work in every place. That's been categorically proven to be untrue.
Again, it's a kind of push and pull of the need for a connection at the higher level and funding for those pieces, but acknowledging that the needs and on-the-ground solutions in different areas are going to look different. That gets into essentially overcoming jurisdictional hurdles. I get into a lot of conversations where I hear, “Oh, it would be great to do that, but that's so-and-so's jurisdiction.” People don't care whose jurisdiction it is. They want us to work together so they can go to school and go visit their grandmothers and all of those things.
That would be my answer.