Yes. I can sum it up in one word: socio-economic conditions. When your community has no housing and has no jobs, when those kids turn 18 and are no longer the responsibility of an agency, they will fail and they are failing. Those are stats that are often blamed on child welfare delivery agencies. You always see in the media that child welfare is failing first nations kids, but when you're attempting to place them in an environment that puts them against these great odds of success, those are going to be the results.
Our approach to that is placing children in environments where they can be successful, where there are universities. Many of our children in care are in Manitoba post-secondary institutions that we pay for. They are not funded but we find a way. Again, we bend rules to make things like that happen. The outcomes are phenomenal. When the province comes knocking and says, “Hey, you can't do that” and then looks at our outcomes, they turn them into pilot projects. Sandy Bay has been in four projects in the last year or so.
I hope that answers your question.