Thank you, ladies, for being here. Both of you have given us great food for thought. I think you have given us some things we can work on.
When we had the witnesses in front of us, the families—and I cited this last week—we had Bernadette Smith here whose sister is missing. One of the things that she so imploringly said to us was, "Please, no more reports".
Ms. Blackstock, you've cited two more reports tonight just in your own commentary. Last week I made the comment in our discussions that there are an extraordinary number of reports available. One of the committee members challenged me, so I did a l bit of investigation this week. Just in 22 reports that I have downloaded, there are 437 academic reports cited, just in 22.
Ms. Redsky, one of the ones I have here is by the Canadian Women's Foundation. That alone has 66 citations of academic studies that have been done.
The studies are done. Isn't it time we got down to work and put solutions to these problems? Isn't it time that we came up with recommendations?
Ms. Redsky, one of the academic reports you cite is from Amnesty International. I see here they have made recommendations to ensure indigenous women access to justice, to improve public awareness and accountability, to provide adequate and stable funding to the front-line organizations that provide culturally appropriate services, to address the root causes of violence against indigenous women, and to eliminate inequities in the services available to aboriginal children.
All of those issues are hitting the very things you've talked about with us tonight.
I note that, according to another report, which is from Newfoundland and Labrador, 56% of the violent incidents committed against aboriginal people are perpetrated by someone who is known to the victim. It goes on to talk about the domestic violence that goes on.
If we know what the causes are, and you've talked about starting to put together some of the solutions, isn't it time we started to address them?