Thank you very much.
You are right that I said there were six recommendations. I felt I was going over my time, so I didn't go into my sixth recommendation. But I actually brought it into our discussion, and it's the one where we might explore a more productive relationship by possibly creating this joint Inuit-federal government Northwest Passage authority. That was the sixth recommendation.
Let me address the bigger picture you just laid out. There are many factors regarding why our young people are not doing as well as they should. There is the fact that our school system needs to be improved. We need better social and health system services. We don't have services for mental health. The suicide rate is seven times greater than in the rest of Canada, and it's mostly young men who are committing suicide. We don't have a mental health service in the north; it's non-existent in many areas because, as you know, our communities are very remote. There are no roads. The smaller the community, the less service they get. Mental health has been one of the key priorities in the development of our health services—not to diminish the other health factors as well.
Education is another one.
On climate change, we need adaptation programs. The climate is changing rapidly in the Arctic. We can't do anything about it; it's not really in our hands, and yet we have no real ability to help people adapt to those changes. You are right that it is having an impact.
So when you put all of these things together, it's very difficult for me say what the number one priority is, because all of these factors are interrelated.
We have communities that are going to have to be relocated because of climate change. One of them is in Nunavik, where Salluit is a community that is sinking.
These are very big issues for our communities.