Perhaps I could add quickly what we've been hearing from the friendship centres. There are a few things.
A lot of the friendship centres are trying to provide supports for youth who are in foster care or who are youth in care, because sometimes the friendship centre is the connection to their culture and their community in the urban spaces. We've heard that some friendship centres are doing the best they can to provide special outreach to those young people.
We are also calling for some technology—software, hardware, tablets, laptops and cellphones —so the friendship centre staff can move to a virtual service provision instead of working out of an office and still be able to connect. They also want to be able to donate or to lend these devices to community members so they can stay in touch, not just to young people so they can keep in touch with their counsellor at the friendship centre, but also to other vulnerable members of the community, such as indigenous seniors, whose mental health is also being affected. They are unable to connect as well.
A lot of friendship centres have transitioned their programming to be capable of virtual access. They have been doing a lot of youth-specific outreach to keep young people connected with each other and have been trying to find new ways to connect.
I will add there the connectivity issue, the issue of ensuring that the Internet is widely available, especially in the rural and remote northern communities, so that they can tune in to some of the programming and have access to content that is being developed to help them stay connected.
Also, it's not just having the Internet available, but being able to pay for that Internet at home so that we don't have young people who have to walk or drive out to parking lots and huddle under a blanket so they can do their homework or connect to what's happening and have access to all these virtually provided services.