Thank you, Chair.
I have to make a quick comment. Although I know that we're really focused on natural resource industries and opportunities, I want to still give a shout out to the people who decide to commit to health care and education. We talked about there being a lot of women who head into that field. It certainly pays better than it used to and continues, of course, to provide absolutely critically important opportunities for the men and the women who choose that path.
I'm going to focus and maybe take it from the macro to the micro level, because to be quite frank, I think it can get a little confusing. Let's say we have a mine that's proposed for North Thompson Valley. We have a very strong, active Métis association there. We have a friendship centre, an ASETS holder, and some provincial programs. Talk to me about how a young woman—and in this we'll use a young woman who's now living in the Kamloops area—is going to decide which door to go through. Do we really have things that are overlapping too much?
I'll open that up to everyone, because it seems like we have BladeRunners, BCAMTA, and ASETS holders. So how does the individual young woman decide what she's going to do and where she's going to go?
I'll start with Ms. Blanchard.