It's a really important question. That's why the overarching work plan is so important. It's why the general principles are important. It's why we need to work individually. We need to work on a multilateral level to make sure that we're all heading in the same direction, but also on a more bilateral level as we negotiate benefit interactions with provinces and territories.
For example, we may be in a world where a province looks at a federal benefit, like the housing benefit or the CCB, and within its own system has a list of exemptions, things it doesn't consider for the purpose of calculating income for the purpose of enabling a person to get their benefits. The solution in that province might be to get this on that list, on that side of the ledger. Another province might not have that list; another province might have a different way of determining benefits.
What this government managed to do, very quickly, coming out of the 2015 election, was negotiate that every province in the country would not consider the Canada child benefit as income for the purpose of supports and social assistance entitlements. We have a model. We have a precedent within the time of our government. There are lots of variables, but there are also strong indications and a lot of hope that we will be able to get this across the finish line.
I don't think there's going to be a problem doing this, but we have to do it right.