Thank you, Mr. Chairman. In the other area of support mechanisms in the communities, especially right now in my home community of Fort McPherson, they are going through a crisis where a young man was murdered. The whole community is grieving over the matter in which they are trying to deal with it the best they can with the limited resources. Before we had specialists in the community who worked within the Tl'oondih Healing Society to assist, especially in areas such as this case, where a violent crime was committed. There were two young people in jail because of it. It is not only going to affect one family but a whole community.
There has to be more understanding from the government as to how communities are having to cope with these efforts with limited human resources in allowing the communities to have specialists or organizations to assist in dealing with programs when you are talking about addictions, alcohol, drugs, violence or child development programs. There has been an attempt by myself, along with the Minister, through a motion I passed last year in committee of the whole, commitments by the Premier, the Minister of Finance and Mr. Ng. Is there a way the government can deal directly with the communities versus having to deal through the regional health board which seems to be where the bottleneck problem is, where resources are not really flowing directly to communities? It seems to be held up, where you have to go through another bureaucracy to get approvals or to get anything done, you have to submit reports. Is there a way they can streamline that so they deal directly with the department?