 The Native Women's Advisory Committee came from the National Women's Forum that was held in June of 2011 and information is in tab four of your kits. There was a recommendation that there be a community-driven process to address violence against women and murdered and missing women at that forum. So following the forum, Minister Pollack approached individuals to sit as an advisory committee to provide advice to the minister so that we can try and work more effectively to address violence against women and murdered and missing women. On a personal level, when I think about the things that are happening throughout the region in B.C. on murdered and missing women, there are many we hear through the media more specifically and the reason I mention it is because there is a need for us as leaders to begin addressing the issue of violence against women. More recently, you probably heard about Ledger Bockoff in Prince George where there were four additional counts of murder that he was charged with, the non-average male in Prince George, three out of those four women were Aboriginal women in the Prince George area. You remember Taisha on the island, the many on the Highway of Tears, the downtown east side. So there is a lot happening throughout the region. At this point, I'm grateful for the support and the work that Grand Chief Steward Philip does on behalf of the leaders in being present at gatherings throughout the region and especially in the downtown east side. So there is a lot of work to be done.