Thank you, Madam Chair. Two things: one, like I said earlier, we can't do this alone, so we are open to partnerships. If something like the Arnica Inn came and they were offering something or an Indigenous government, we would be open to partner with that, so we might do it. The other thing to manage alcohol is kind of on its own. It kind of combines, and yet it is on its own. I am going to try to be politically correct because I respect the people that I spent 20 years working with, is that there are people, Madam Chair, that the level of addiction and the damage that has happened is so astute, that to ask them to go from using constantly from their wake up until they go to bed, to actually go to rehab, you are looking at medical problems, then. What's DT's called? The withdrawal from it is going to be huge. Managed alcohol has been utilized in many different jurisdictions. It is being shown to work.
I think in the last Assembly, I was fortunate to go with the Minister of Health. We went down to a program, I believe it was in Toronto. It could have been a different city. They took us there. People that were chronic users were finding success with that. They had to start. They started with the managed alcohol, and then because it was monitored, they eventually got to a place where they could use less. It is part of the answer. It is not the whole answer. You can't put one treatment for every person. We have to stop doing that. That is what people have done all through centuries. Best practice says you don't make people fit models; you make models fit people. Use what works for all the people that you see. Thank you, Madam Chair.