This is a big discussion. When I mentioned in my opening remarks the whole of government, we're not talking about just federal, obviously, because your health care systems are run provincially. All of those challenges are with respect to federal and provincial funding, not to mention access municipally.
Just yesterday I was talking to some legislators up in one of the territories. There we were talking about the challenges for health care simply just in rural and remote communities, without even broaching the subject of treatment and diversionary programs. For us, what our members are seeing—and the majority of our members in uniform out in Canada are in smaller communities outside of the Burnabys or the Surreys and the Edmonton areas—is exactly that. The government representatives on the ground might be Canada Post and the RCMP. If you're lucky, you have both.
Our members actually end up working with the community. We had a story from one of our members who was a chef before they joined the RCMP, and they started cooking classes for underprivileged youth. They brought in food and showed them how to sustain themselves. That kind of example is there. It's just off the cuff, off the side of a desk. It has an impact for the community ahead of time.
How do we get there, so that everyone in Canada has access to the same types of programs? That's a really big discussion. I'd love to be a part of it, but I think it involves more than just this table.