The evidence from elsewhere in the world—it hasn't been done in Canada—is that you have to do, as I said, a whole community approach, which means all of government services but a number of private sector services and volunteer services. You essentially have to get them all coordinated and working together. If you don't do essentially a full-service group working together, it won't work.
The second thing you need to do is have a significant role for youth in designing the actual program. The evidence elsewhere shows very clearly that coming in with a laying on of hands by some group of adults, whether they're local or not local, doesn't work. The kids don't buy it.
The best examples in the world, one in Germany and a couple elsewhere in Australia, have been cases not where the youth were running it but where they were a very major player and all of the various public, i.e., government, social services and the private sector typically not-for-profit social services got together.