There are three very specific programs, one of which is housed at CMHC. Another one is a fund that is managed by an indigenous board of directors under CMHC's guidance, which was set up under the Harper government. There's a third one within Indigenous Services. There are additional supports around youth, seniors and people coming in and out of custody. There are also provisional housing programs, but those ones are largely within the health ministry.
I would suggest that CMHC is the most important and that Minister Miller's department have staff come forward. Those are the two major programs. Then we can probably also pull in, from CMHC, the reaching home program, which deals specifically with indigenous homelessness, a stream under CMHC that is managed by local community entities, some of which I assume will end up appearing on the list. So we should get CMHC and Minister Miller's department.
I would also suggest Stats Canada. One of the things that the report referenced by my colleague doesn't have is good data. When it says 87%, it divides who is on and off reserve, but there is also the actual calculation of who is off reserve and who self-identifies as indigenous but may not be identified within Stats Canada. Getting a handle on that number is going to be critically important as we try to scale a response. If this study can give us an agreed-to number, it will help all of us that much more to provide the funding that's needed to support this program, so I would add Stats Canada, to come in to talk about the demographic situation. We also need to know the difference between elders and youth and that sort of information.