Thank you, Madam Chair. I do have the numbers here in front of me. We had 391 applications coming from 94 different businesses to just over 2,100-and-some individuals. This was for all workers 15 years and over. Somebody who is 16 is not necessarily in a situation where they need to be making a living wage if they're still living at home, and it does also include people who are working in the service sector where -- it's not a statement but simply a pro or con to this -- they may well be in a situation of making tips on top of wages.
I think the point is that there is some more analysis that could be done about which industries, which sectors, which businesses are, in fact, paying the $18 an hour wage, but it's not quite as simple as to say that the 2,100-and-some people who have benefited from this program were all not making a living wage. I think it's a little bit more of a complicated story than that. The point, though, is to go and figure out, maybe, what that story is to the extent that we're able to. Thank you, Madam Chair.