Yes, as I mentioned earlier, it's very difficult sometimes when people develop mental illness during their teens. It definitely interrupts education. They start to get better and are told they need something to do, so they end up volunteering instead of getting a paid job.
I've been volunteering now for 30 years. I need to be paid, as do people with mental health issues. We need paying jobs, and we need technologies as well. When people's education is interrupted, they not only miss the education piece, but they miss a lot of that experiential stuff that students go through. They become isolated and no longer part of the group. Anybody who wasn't popular in high school knows what I mean by that.
What we need to do is huge public education; yes, we need to deal with that. We need to address youth issues if we're going to deal with mental health issues, because they quite often strike in youth.
We also need to help people be connected with technology. Many people with mental health issues end up very isolated because they're living on income security programs that don't properly fund them. They end up living in a dump or on the streets, or they end up living in a house that you wouldn't wish upon your worst enemy, or they end up moving up north, where I am, and they live in hunt camps; they live in the bush and they live in substandard housing. That enables them to have a roof over their head, but it creates problems in and of itself, because there's no transportation when they live out in the bush, so they're really isolated.
People need connectivity. There are lots of programs in which we, as grassroots organizations, give refurbished computers to people, but they can't afford the Internet access, or the phone, or the BlackBerry. If we had programs that helped provide those things for people, they could further their education, they could volunteer, they could work.
What if every municipality in Canada put in $100 a year? How many municipalities are there?