Thank you, Madam Chair. So this is something that gets managed through the program, and they will identify clients' needs. It's not a dissimilar kind of assessment to look at a person's community care needs, and then work with the family and others to make sure there's proper care in place. It's often a very different type of care. Not often nursing. It could be other types of care that's required.
There is a connection, though, between the supportive living review and long-term care in the sense that we do know that in the Northwest Territories, there are people being cared for in long-term care beds who have cognitive issues, who are younger, who are not seniors; they're younger people with disabilities. And so one of the questions that we've had as part of this supportive living review is are there people currently in long-term care who, if we did a model redesign, could be repatriated to a community and to be cared for in a more dignified manner in that way. So that's some of the advice we're looking forward to receiving at the end of March. Thank you, Madam Chair.