There are two issues. There's the issue of the currently homeless population that costs a lot of money to reverse. Those people may or may not ever be able to seek gainful employment. There's a lot of damage done by the drugs that are on our street now, fentanyl. A number of people have to be revived many times.
I think the direction needs to go to our children. As an emerging city, we are some distance away from post-secondary education, and we've been working with Simon Fraser University to bring a cohort program. I'm an alumna from Simon Fraser University. They have great programming. Making that accessible to our children is very important. We've run up a proposal for a civic facility through Minister Sohi and a number of other ministers—Minister Bennett—that will house a museum and archives that can showcase aboriginal issues, but most importantly also house a post-secondary space so that we can bring a cohort program into our city.
We need our kids in this city to be able to access post-secondary education. Some of the kids in this city might not traditionally transition well into the larger universities, so what we've talked about with Simon Fraser University is the ability to wrap support and get some funding from either the provincial or federal government around supporting the kids making the transition into post-secondary education. We would actually create an opportunity for kids who might not otherwise be able to go to university because of the transit, the commute, the distance, or the support systems that need to be in place.