(audio) and it's -- I was just -- there was an area my good friend from the Deh Cho and I were talking about and just by way of a sentence or two to -- you know, the North is a bit different, and we all know that. We talk about that all the time, right. So I mean, who am I telling here in this room? We have 19 experts of how the North is different and we talk about it every day. But, you know, sometimes we can't apply a Hamilton, Ontario, application of how we treat our folks and our families and our friends. I mean, when you're in a small community, I can't say everyone here knows in this room, but when you grow up there, you know everybody and it's hard not to be connected whether you know them or not. You just know them. You know, it's the reality. So whether you're related or just friends, who knows. But the thing is that what makes this different is that those special relationships, and what makes me wonder about, you know, why don't we invest the time in creating a bereavement policy. And I think that's truly what the Member's after in some form or fashion about how do we address these things. Because when you're in a community, you know, and you don't have resources to connect or pull things together or deal with them in these ways, you just don't have them, and it becomes a massive crisis at a time that this just layers on trauma.
So my question for the Minister -- like I say, I don't need the whole ten minutes, but I mean, it's a matter of is it time to ask the department to examine a bereavement policy? Because there were always those who could afford it. There were always those who have insurance. But there's a lot of people that that wouldn't qualify for it. So I'm asking, can you consider it and examine it and then come back to the House on your thoughts on that and as well as, you know, what type of economics are we talking about? Thank you.