Thank you, Mr. Chair. The most recent status reports that I actually just looked at the other day for Integrated Case Management show that there are 75 clients that have been referred to the Integrated Case Management unit. Those clients come from a number of different areas and are referred by anyone from front-line service providers at Stanton, RCMP, Yellowknife Health and Social Services, Legal Aid, Probation, Housing Corporation. They've been looking at and working with those individuals on a wide range of issues. Often, housing is an item that the clients need assistance on. It can also be assistance on items around other supports or accessing other programs offered by government and by others.
There is an evaluation process that has commenced already for Integrated Case Management. The first part of the process under the pilot was to establish measures that will -- and what data would be collected through the life of the pilot so that an appropriate evaluation could be undertaken. There are now sufficient clients that part of the next stage of evaluation would include interviewing those clients to get a sense of their experience and their perception of what's worked and what hasn't, and to also speak to service providers that have referred the individuals to the program to understand their experience with the pilot.
Those are the kinds of things that would be looked at in the next evaluation of the pilot. That is an interim evaluation. There would then be a final evaluation closer to the end of the pilot, because it does come to an end at the end of this fiscal year. Thank you, Mr. Chair.