I think you're absolutely correct that surveying communities that may be rural or remote is significant, and there are often big barriers. When we look at the 203 first nations in British Columbia, many of those are rural. Of course, some are remote as well. Some are more contiguous to urban areas. But in the rural ones the service barriers are huge. For instance, it may require an hour of travel to get to the community. Often the services that are provided are governed by some really odd contracts, so someone works a 9:00 to 4:00 day, but it's two hours to get to the community, then they'll only have an hour, because they have to turn around and return because there may be inclement weather. They're not going to work differential hours, which means they're not necessarily going to work when people need them.
Many of the services have not been aligned to take into account the needs of those who live in rural or remote first nations. So it is going to cost more. You need flexibility, and you need to have a different type of partnership. That has to be understood up front, so the cost metrics around how you serve victims need to reflect this. As you know, in British Columbia the supports, for instance, in the area of domestic violence start to disappear once you get into rural British Columbia, and they become virtually non-existent in remote communities. Hence, you have a real need to fill that service gap.