Some of us within the department are pushing very hard to do more for families along exactly the line you're saying. As I mentioned before, it is a critical problem.
Let me use Gagetown as an example, because I know it better. We've had money for child psychiatry, child psychology, as well as for just general psychology and psychiatry. We can't find people to go to these locations. So it's partly a resource problem, partly a locale problem.
As Colonel Ethell indicated, we have in the past provided direct medical care to our families. It is a provincial responsibility, and this is the dilemma we're stuck with. I must say, though, that even in the best world, having enough clinical psychologists for children in the Pembroke-Petawawa area would be difficult.
Who should do it? Officially, the province should do it. That's the way the legislation reads.
I guess we're not allowed to express personal opinions, but I think my opinion is pretty obvious when it comes to what I think we should do—namely, a lot more.