Thank you.
You also said that if OSISS isn't able to supply a particular need of some sort, there are other things within the community, generally provincial or municipal concerns. But one of the concerns, of course, is who would then pay for that. If OSISS wasn't able to have a particular child psychologist or someone of that nature, and then, say, the province had one and the person went there to get their treatment, they would have to pay for that. Would OSISS end up paying for that, or would they themselves have to pay for that if they go outside OSISS to get help?
Again, I go back to the financial problems they have. If they go to OSISS—