Those are really good questions.
I think that people have to have a choice. You can't force people to sign up. You can do a lot around the education of why it's important to sign up and do a lot of promotion out there and campaigns on why it's important to sign up, but ultimately you can't force people to sign up. Really, it's their choice.
For the second question, we have a number of programs. I have over 60 staff and 30 programs, so we not only address missing and murdered indigenous women and girls, but missing and murdered indigenous men and boys. We use CAP's Walking in Her Moccasins model to work with men, because if we're going to keep our women safe, we have to ensure that men provide the support and advocacy for women and women's groups as well. We want to show our males how to be a healthy male. A lot of that has been taken away as a result of colonialism, as the role of the gatherer of food and bringing home the food, and the warm, protecting woman has been changed through residential schools and the Sixties Scoop.
Now we're looking at redefining the man's role in the family, so I think they go nicely in partnership.
Our missing and murdered indigenous women and girls program has a committee that is all girls. If we have a session, we also do MMIWG with MMIMB as well, so we combine the two in support. Our action plan is built directly from the community up, so it goes out to our community and it does input.
We understand, through Summer Kneebone's experience, what needed to get done. We're still dealing with that, even though it was in 2023, because it still takes time to get through the courts. The families want answers now. They want to understand now, and they're angry.