I'll give you the example of Sioux Lookout where the friendship centre came to an agreement with the Ontario Aboriginal Housing Services corporation and the district social service administration board. Most of the country doesn't know what it is, but it's a municipal-level social service delivery administrative body.
What happened there is that the housing services corporation built the housing, the service manager provided the land, and the agreement was that the friendship centre would provide the supports. If there had been no supports.... What ended up happening in Sioux Lookout was that you had 98% or 99% of the homeless population being indigenous.
The friendship centre stepped in to provide the service. It filled up immediately, and 20 people who had been chronically homeless are now getting the kinds of supports that they want because it is an indigenous service provider that provides culture-based services. Where that is not the case, people stay away.
It's simply a question of whether you want people to get the services or not, because people will stay away in large numbers if the services are not culture based.