Just to add to that, we see that on a regular basis. We have had a housing pilot program for just over a year. The funds came from Service Canada. One of the biggest challenges facing sex workers is the lack of housing. For sex workers, we get them into housing, and that's basic. We get them into housing, which we've been extremely successful in doing. I'd say that our success rate is 80%. But when we're not successful, that's due to the criminalization. Everybody asks why so many street-based sex workers are homeless. It's because they are criminalized. What happens is they get a house, maybe there's another charge that comes back, and they're off to jail for doing what they have to do to survive. Then they come out and their house is gone. That's the only difficulty we have in retention rates with the people we work with through the federal program. Then again, that's another thing we are lobbying for.
We've had an extremely high success rate. As Claudia said, we're actually surprised because it is that simple. The only challenges, aside from criminalization of people in poverty, is the discrimination that happens with some landlords--not all. It's also from society and other residents. Again, that just shows that we have more work to do as a whole with education.