I think it's going to end up being two steps. I think we're going to need a national body that doesn't have to be educated in all of the 150-plus years of colonial impacts and traumas that have happened to our communities. It's going to have to be a national centre that understands the urban challenges you've heard about from my brothers and sisters before me here, especially in the north.
I've travelled this country—I've travelled this world— at the request of indigenous communities and organizations asking for AHMAs in their own provinces. I was approached by Nova Scotia, which has a couple of urban indigenous organizations that are wanting to try to build capacity.
As you heard from Mr. Bell, you could throw $10 million at them today, and they probably couldn't respond because they're sitting there with no staffing resources and no infrastructure to actually execute the delivery.
We're going to need to see both. We're going to need to see a national centre that understands urban indigenous issues, and we're going to need to see that national centre build capacity out in provinces that don't already have it. Ontario has it; Saskatchewan has it; B.C. has it, but there aren't very many others.