For homelessness funding, I will give you an example. This is nothing against Hamilton. However, the way some of the funding flows is that cities are put into broad categories, so if you're larger than a certain size of population, you get a certain amount of money. It's larger per person if you're in a bigger city. The expectation there is that the demands are larger on larger centres, so more money is going to flow there.
Hamilton is over the threshold, and London is just under the threshold. Hamilton is one category and we're in the other category. Hamilton has, let's say, 550,000, and we have almost 400,000. Frankly, our needs are not that different, and they get 10 times as much money. There's a bit of inequity there in terms of how it's designed, and if it was per capita it would be more fair.