Mr. Ted Menzies —so their math is a little tough.
I'm sorry to interrupt the ad campaign on behalf of the Liberals.
Mr. Sangster and Mr. Baxter, you have touched my heart today. I was with my premier, Ed Stelmach, about ten days ago at the Foothills Country Hospice in Okotoks. It is an incredible facility, but there is not enough of them. I had toured the facility before it was ever opened, thinking I would never be able to go back there because I would be imposing on families. But we were invited back and we were invited into one of the rooms. I met with someone who turned out to be one of my constituents. They come from all over Alberta to this centre, which was built mostly with volunteer dollars.
I certainly hear the need and the concerns about who funds it when it's up and running. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think Alberta is funding about 70%, and 30% is....
After that, of course, we went to a fundraising gala, where we opened our wallets, of course. Certainly, it's a necessary part.
I struggled with this myself; we've all gone through this as families. The people who staff these are incredible people, and they need help. I don't know how they do it. I asked them, and they say they accept this as a gift that God has given them, to be able to help these people die with dignity.
How do we balance this federal-provincial...? Whose role is it, and how do we fund it? How do we balance that?