I want to thank you very much for coming here today, and especially for lighting the candle for Annie. I know that's really shaken our local community and nationally, as well. I really appreciate your honesty and everything you've brought forward today. I think you've given us a lot of food for thought.
One thing you mentioned, and you didn't get a chance to really go into the question about traditional justice, was that there's no child who is untouched in some way. This is very disturbing. I know we've heard in other areas that there are more indigenous children in care now than there were in the sixties scoop. To what extent would there be a reluctance to report, if there is sexual violence happening in the home, because of the fear of the breakup of the family?
How can we develop programs that would allow—as we've heard with campuses and other things, where there's an alternative justice—it to be more about the safety and the protection? How do you develop those kinds of programs? How could the federal government help to ensure that the children, if there is violence in the home, feel that it is safe, and that there is confidentiality and that there are mechanisms for them to report?