Shirley mentioned the provinces and territories in the communities. I don't want to get technical, but you start dealing with a different jurisdiction, so you have your federal jurisdiction and then your provincial jurisdiction. What we find federally is, yes, we have the Canada Health Act and we have cross-country health issues, but the federal government doesn't manage health care in the provinces.
We know education is an issue, especially the sexualization of young women. A lot of that can be addressed through education. We don't run the school boards. We don't even manage the education system.
We have federal-provincial-territorial forums where deputies meet at those levels with their counterparts and ADMs. At our level we have working groups with our provincial and territorial colleagues, but our colleagues are also in the justice and public safety arena. We want our provincial justice and public safety colleagues to engage their education partners, their health partners, their citizenship and immigration partners to deal with that at a very local level, because the crime is at the back end. One of the reasons we have a crime prevention program is to stop them at the front end, early. That's why six to 12 is a real focus. Then we go to the youth.
The issues are generally about the family dynamics growing up. How do social services intervene in that? How do you help those youth? I feel like I'm straying from your question in a way. It's something the federal government works at with our other government departments internally, but we also reach out to the provinces and territories and communities to ask how we can work together and get those things done.