I'll just comment briefly on that.
In regard to mental health and youth, it's very important for us to be looking at quick and immediate intervention to support not just youth but families.
There's been a bit of a shift. A federal study was done on the rates of sexually transmitted infections among street youth over a number of years. This was done by the Public Health Agency of Canada. One of the questions was about education. They were doing this study to find out about rates of sexually transmitted infections.
In that study came this real gold nugget--in Nova Scotia, anyway--that 72%, I think, of youth that we surveyed had only grade nine, had been kicked out because of lots of issues. At home it was really too much for family to handle them, and then they were out of the home and living on the streets, or living in a homeless situation.
I think that says something about the state of what families are needing to deal with and how they're having to manage. We need early intervention, and certainly programs that are directed towards that, not just for youth who have mental health issues but also, I believe, for families. We need to be doing a better job supporting families in their ability to parent, to support their children.