You took the next words out of my mouth. Risk versus reward is often what you see. I see this often in vulnerable people in general.
I have a mom in my riding, and her daughter lived on the street and dealt with severe mental illness. She went missing, and nobody put it in the media. Nobody seemed to pay attention. We were able to get her home through social media, but there's a stigma or shame. If I'm putting that on social media, people are going to say, “I don't want people to know it's my family”, but I think you have to look at the bigger picture. I appreciate your putting that on the record.
The other thing you said that is really important when we look at this are the dead zones on highways when you're travelling and cell service in remote areas. A lot of these women and men—thank you, Lorna, for pointing that out—are in these really rural parts of Canada.
I'm wondering if you think a good idea would be signage saying that this is a dead cellphone area. I guess people would already know it's a dead cellphone area, but how do we close that gap? I think about when I travelled the highway from Banff to Jasper. It's one of the most dangerous highways. It was snowy, and there's not one ounce of cell service.
What do you think we can do when we're trying to close that gap of notifying people? Are there any suggestions, or has there been any talk about that?