Thank you very much.
I want to come back to the question of rent-geared-to-income housing, and try to situate it in the larger question of the housing spectrum.
I wonder if Ms. McIsaac would like to speak to the impact that serious deficiency in one area of the housing spectrum ends up having for folks in other areas of the housing spectrum.
Sometimes, when we lose rent-geared-to-income housing, people just drop out of the spectrum altogether, and into homelessness. They might end up in shelters. They might end up in motels, as Mr. Chambers was saying not that long ago. In some cases, they end up cannibalizing their budget for food and medication in order to compete in the affordable market space.
Anyway, I wonder if Ms. McIsaac might speak a bit about the housing spectrum, and how deficiencies in one area, particularly at the lower end, can actually resonate in other parts of the housing spectrum.