Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Welcome. I really appreciate your appearing this morning. I have had a chance to talk to some of the committee members, and I know the good work you have done as part of the review and how important it is.
Ron, if we have time, I'm going to get to the fact I pushed before about the 16 priorities and how you're going to help us make sure that we get them done. I didn't get a lot of help the other day, and I don't expect to again, because they want them all done, and so on.
What I want to start with, though, is that I had a great experience during Veterans' Week at Windsor Park at the family centre. It was part of an ongoing vignette presentation. One of the things that really struck me, which ties in with exactly what you're talking about, is how very difficult and frustrating it is. The longer I'm with this, the longer I find out how frustrating many of the issues are. I think we're all trying to get to the same result. Maybe we're not 100% in agreement, but we're all trying to get there.
One of the things that struck me in going on the tour and talking to a number of people who are part of that family centre at Windsor Park in Halifax is that they really are in many ways the first-line people. These family centres across the country are the families of the military people. They're the ones who hear the daily stories from the families, from the wives, and from the kids as they come through there. They often say much of what you're saying: It's very difficult to get the military people to open up. They don't want us intruding in their lives. That's basically what they say. They are very proud. They're very much part of the family themselves. And getting through there, we have to support what they want to do. But we cannot say “This is the answer,” and put it on top of them. They made that abundantly clear over and over again.
Last week, when that young lady was killed in Halifax—she was a military wife, and ironically, she was killed in a head-on collision with a military bus--the first thing I thought of was that there would be that military family at these centres who would be dealing with those issues before the department, before the government, got involved.
Whatever we're doing, I think we have to really connect with them, those people who are the family members, because they will talk about the very thing. They know that there are services. I've heard the comment that they may or may not find out about them, but that's probably as good a place as any to find them, particularly for the younger military and younger veterans, who aren't traditionally connected.
I just want to make the point that the further we all get into this, the more we realize how difficult the job is to get there. So we have to work harder. I think we all want to get to the same place. I'm not sure we'll get there on all 16 recommendations at the same time, but that's our problem, not yours.
A comment I have, though, and it's sort of a general comment, is that as we move into the next stage, as we finish our work, hopefully it will support the work you're doing and will go back to departments. I start from the premise that I believe the department, particularly professional people, are trying the very best they can to provide the services they can. We're not talking in a critical way about them. But often they find it very difficult to get to the level we're talking about. In other words, there are those people we miss, whether they're homeless or have mental challenges and so on.
I think everybody is looking for direction. Everybody would like some direction as to how we make those next steps, whether it's suicide prevention or intervention or whatever it may be. How do we help get there without simply saying that we have the answer? Because we don't. We know we don't.
Without getting into the 16 recommendations, what do you think the very next step would be? This is an open question. What's the very next step for all of us to take that you think is appropriate? We don't say that this is the answer and this is the end of it. This is a moving and living charter. We know that. What is the next step you think we should take? It's an open question.