Thank you so much. It's a real pleasure to be here.
I normally sit in the natural resources committee, so this has been quite a lovely change in tone and topic. Thank you for letting me be here this afternoon.
I actually have six thoughts, somewhat random thoughts, and some of these are fuelled by the fact that I have a wife who works as a doctor in a hospital in B.C. and who also deals with some of the issues discussed here today. We have three kids—two daughters and a son, between 16 and 21 years old—so we have a lot of discussions. When they asked what I was doing today, I said I was coming here. I was fascinated today.
So this is sort of an assemblage of thoughts that I'll put out there, and in the time that's left over, anything that you could offer on it would be great. You're also allowed to do up written briefs on anything, so maybe this will give some fuel for thought.
First is simply that in B.C. we've recently rolled out a model called the Foundry. It may not mean anything if you're not in B.C., but it's for youth community-driven programs. My community was the 13th one in B.C., and it's about having a place for youth in crisis to go to. It provides wraparound services. The doors have been open for only a month, but we're seeing great success. It's for kids who are in crisis, who are looking at identity issues, family issues and a lot of things related to instability and mental health issues, so they have a place to go and land. It's great, and I would love to know what else we have in Canada, in other provinces and territories, other jurisdictions. There could be a best practice that could be shared, and perhaps the federal government could help facilitate some of those best lessons.
Second is eating disorders. My daughter says that it seems as though half of the female population right now has an eating disorder and issues of body dysmorphia. This has been a societal problem, but do we understand it? Is it getting worse? What are the root causes and treatments? I think this is something that is really important, and we can't pretend that it's not happening in society.
Third, you spoke, Mr. Charters, about the right to be forgotten. In B.C. we have a couple of names that always come to mind, Reena Virk and Amanda Todd. Both of their lives were ended tragically through bullying and cyber-bullying. I'm really interested in what the federal government can do to help and whether we've gone far enough in working with other jurisdictions on bullying and cyber-bullying.
Fourth is this whole sense of helplessness and climate change. How do we give hope to our youth again? There is a sense of despair that I hear from youth in our community, and I think we need to do better as the adults in the room to get a sense of hope and a sense that they can help.
Fifth is toxic masculinity. My 16-year-old daughter texted me. Her question would be, why do men all have this thousand-times-overinflated ego and why do they think they are experts on everything? That doesn't help with self-esteem. The question is about toxic masculinity in society.
Finally, there is this whole question of causation, prevention and trajectory and where the best point to intervene is. How do we get ahead of mental health issues? Is it through advertising? Is it through stable communities and family situations?
There's a bunch of random thoughts. I'd love to get solutions.