Okay.
From my perspective, I have been talking a long time, whenever I can use my voice, to reach indigenous veterans, especially in the urban context, and setting up offices—part-time, once a month or whatever—at the friendship centres across Canada. There are 126 friendship centres across Canada. Veterans go to the urban environment. Where they're going for help is through those friendship centres. That's one aspect of it.
The other aspect is that, for those indigenous veterans who are in remote areas, access to those services is very difficult, especially if they're homeless.
The other thing is for Veterans Affairs to look at and consider treatment from a spirituality aspect for us veterans, like sweat lodges and having access to elders to be able to talk to them to get through trauma and times like that. It's being back in a community and working through those spirituality aspects.