I think part of what I would observe, from my an experience in a smaller community and working now in a more urban environment, is that range of access to services. That is a huge driver of that churn, the types of services that one might need to access versus what's available in the community where you live, the difference between living in Edmonton versus living in my community of Driftpile Cree Nation. It has 1,200 members and is very small in northern Alberta.
I think that's where you start to see the barriers in access and what happens to people when they don't have access to those things. Chief Leon might have more of an observation of the day-to-day situation in terms of access to housing on reserve. I think it's a huge barrier.
When you go into the city, I think some of those barriers turn into things around access to addiction and mental health services, the shelter systems and larger cycles that people connect to in those places versus rural areas, where you'd see the larger difference.