Thank you, Mr. Chair. After you turned the page, I clearly forget everything I was discussing on the previous page -- no. I'm just kidding. I totally remember the question.
Government, as a result of the Minister's Forum on Addictions, we actually came forward with funding to support on-the-land programs. We provide that money to the different Aboriginal governments, regional governments here, in the Northwest Territories. We recognize that, although we have some clinical expertise, when it comes to on-the-land programming, those programs should really be delivered by the people in the regions where they're being delivered. So we actually flow money to the different Aboriginal governments, Inuvialuit and Sahtu, Tlicho, who actually design their programs. Occasionally, they ask us to be involved as far as providing some of our clinical expertise, but they actually design and run the programs.
It's really great, actually. We have a wide range of different programs. We have some regions who have decided to do more aftercare-type programs. We've got some regions who have decided to do more prevention-type programs. We have some regions that are doing more of a real on-the-land sort of healing program and some where they've really focused on bringing youth and adults together. So we've got a wide variety, and we're getting huge uptake. We're spending the dollars. The communities or the regions are running these different programs, encouraging people to attend.
We are finalizing some evaluation of them. It's been two years since we've put them in, put these dollars in. So we're currently evaluating some of the successes so that we can share those successes across the different communities and regions so that good ideas can be stolen from one region and utilized in another. We have some pretty significant uptake on these, and they are out there, and they're running, and they're working.