The first thing is more transparency to the public about where those monies are going.
Something that may be affecting some of that is that when the new government came in, in Manitoba—I think they're in mid-term now, or just a little past—they announced a major effort to transform our health system.
I view some of that as positive in the sense that, for example, many practitioners and those of us who are closer to mental health and addictions, appreciate that they often co-occur in individuals. I'm on the board of CMHA Manitoba and Winnipeg, and I have been for a while. For a long time there's been a consensus that we need to bring those two closer together in the health system structure. That's good news.
We had the Peachey report, we had the Virgo report, and I think I understood the government has now set up an implementation committee. Many of us are hopeful that the health transformation in Manitoba will lead us to a better place, but that transformation causes system challenges because people are trying to adjust and they're trying to appreciate in a real sense what all that change means. It affects morale and that affects the performance of people in their jobs. This is a big thing.