Thank you very much for the question.
Indeed, I want to commend you for Homewood. It's a place I visited as Ontario Minister of Health and Long-Term Care. It really is a beacon of hope in a sometimes rocky sea of despair, which is what we find in mental health issues frequently.
I believe passionately that mental health has to have its day, and it has to be the focus of a Canada-wide debate. It has to be something we take seriously as a society. I think those barriers are being broken down. Would we like it to be quicker and more complete? The answer is obviously yes. There are still some stigma issues, some coordination issues, and indeed some funding issues, as you referenced, in the way of that.
We have a number of strategies that are already in place. We do have a national youth suicide prevention strategy, which has $65 million over five years. It's focusing on aboriginal youth, which is where we can directly focus some of our programming. That's something I'd like to signal to you.
More generally, we have the work of senators Kirby and Keon, who released their report back on May 9, looking at national approaches, pan-Canadian approaches, to these issues. Again, not trying to take over the competency of the provincial governments, are there ways that we could collaborate and do some things together? Obviously the government is seized with that report as a society, and I'm hoping to respond once we have thoroughly reviewed it.