Thanks to all three of our witnesses.
I'll start by reacknowledging the fact that we are on traditional and unceded Algonquin territory.
It's a real privilege to have you here with us, so meegwetch, Ms. Decontie. Thank you also for being an important leader in the health and social services field in KZ. I know you're on the board of the Wanaki Centre, so your responsibilities are actually really broad—a substance abuse centre and the health and social services centre.
As irony would have it, Pauline Whiteduck once worked with my father before I was even born, so there's a little connection there.
I wanted to bring in Mr. Parsons' comment around the need for capital infrastructure and bring that question to you and ask you to put it in a Kitigan Zibi context. If the federal government were to be asked by Kitigan Zibi to enable capital infrastructure investments to enable greater long-term care, is that something that's in the field of dreams, something that is sought?
I have a sense of the complexity of the relationship between CISSSO, the regional health authority in KZ, and it's complicated for everyone without even introducing the federal government into the equation. I almost want to park that issue of jurisdiction and just go to an area where the federal government might have a more direct play, which is to finance needed infrastructure. What does Kitigan Zibi need and want when it comes to long-term care infrastructure?