Very quickly, I'll respond to that from the perspective of overall funding of communities and how priorities obviously get set.
As I mentioned in my presentation, health takes a back seat to a lot of the issues, not because nobody likes health, but because it's just a matter of how crisis matters are dealt with. Families in crisis, as I mentioned, are a critical issue in the community.
For example, in terms of basic needs, we take roads and transportation down south for granted. They're a high priority for many of our communities. By the time you go through a lot of the priorities, then you start looking at the children. I'm sure we would find no child in any of our communities who would not attend a structured program if it was ever set in our communities. But then we'd be in a crisis if we found that children didn't come whenever you formed or planned something in the community.
Right now, in my own community, you see a lot of children looking and asking, “When are we going to do this?”, or “When are we going to do this again? Didn't we have fun when we did that last time?” So they're looking, and I think that's the important thing right now. We're fortunate that we're not here talking about children not wanting to do things, and I think that's an important thing too.
But overall in our communities, health and recreation seem to take a very low priority because of the crises that many of our communities are in.