We have six provinces that have moved to the enhanced prevention-focused approach, and those include Alberta, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, Quebec, P.E.I., and Manitoba. Ontario is under the 1965 welfare agreement, so they don't use directive 20-1. They do provide some prevention services within that particular agreement.
That leaves British Columbia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, and Yukon that still have to make the transition. In Newfoundland and the Yukon, the services are provided by the provincial governments and we reimburse them for actual expenditures for maintaining children in care.
Under the enhanced prevention-focused approach, we introduced three streams of funding: operations, prevention, and maintenance. We also provided some additional supports within each of those streams and then it's up to the recipients to manage within the funding.
With the six provinces we've already moved forward on, we're investing $100 million of additional resources into first nations child welfare on reserve. We have reached about 68% of the first nations children on reserve through that approach.