I want to thank the member for the question.
What I will say is that what we do know, particularly coming out of COVID, is that our youth, the kids, are not always all right, especially with the isolation and what went on during the pandemic with being at home. During that time period they were cut off from the social structures that really help enhance the growth and resiliency of our young people.
The federal government made a commitment to integrated youth services, which incorporate wraparound supports for youth and their families, so not only primary health care but also the other aspects of care that come with it—whether those are vocational and job training, social environments or in some cases indigenous communities' land-based learning—with an understanding that we really want to invest in our youth to make sure they have the best tools they need as well as the preventative tool of education to understand the impacts of substance use so they will be well equipped to be out in the world and understand what resources and services are available to them.
We've made sure that these are by community, in community. The best example I can give is that of the Foundry in B.C., which has a wonderful set of services, as my colleague from B.C. here on the other side of the aisle would well know. We know that the impacts of these investments are long-term, which means, if we invest in our young people now, that is an upstream approach to better mental health care for them in the future. We've seen good results and the programs are expanding.