We know that when indigenous communities that have a relationship and a deep knowledge of the needs of that community are provided with resources to do a job, they get the job done.
These new pathways I'm talking about and these new relationships are basically to eliminate some of the jurisdictional discord and wrangling that happens when we are trying to address very serious harm against indigenous women in our communities.
We're talking about direct funding relationships between the federal government and provincial service organizations that have a mandate to do this work, who are already doing this work and have been doing it for decades. We're talking about getting rid of the white tape and eliminating a lot of the barriers and having a lot of flexibility.
We're talking about low barrier, about high flexibility. We're talking about an inside community of resources directed to those individuals and communities that need the resources, those families, so that they can even find their solutions and we can support them in finding their own solutions.
Those are some of the things. We have lots of ideas about this, because we've been testing a lot of things. The homeward bound program that Sean just talked about is a new initiative. It's underfunded—actually not even funded. That's an innovative thing, with wraparound services. That's a totally brand new approach that's working and that we'd love to talk more about with you.