Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Both. So currently we, of course, have the Integrated Case Management Program that is service to residents from multiple departments through a single point. Of course, there's government service workers -- or government service officers in communities. So that work is happening. And it's been happening for years in the GNWT in other ways as well. But particularly flowing from this, those are some of the prime examples.
In terms of policy work, we are already seeing changes to information sharing policies. Across Canada, we've seen privacy legislation grow in importance over the years but some of that growth has resulted in putting up barriers for ourselves in our ability to deliver programs. So we are working to adjust our policies so that we don't need consent from an individual to provide them government services from multiple departments, which is really our problem, not the person's problem. The person wants support, and how do we give them the support? We have to adjust our policies to properly serve them.
So those are a couple examples of the things that we're doing. We are working between departments to review the referral process and ensure that -- and so we -- departments meet to talk about individuals and individual cases, and they also discuss the programs and perhaps some of the barriers that a person is facing in accessing those programs and then policies are being adjusted based on those conversations as well.
We are looking at co-locating certain positions so that a person can go to an office and receive support from multiple departments. And perhaps it's not a full-time co-location, perhaps it's on a rotational basis. So these are the types of things that are happening. They're operational, and they're policy. Thank you.