Yes.
I was going to say that, right now, we're dealing with a different kind of fire, which is the opioid crisis and toxic drug crisis that is devastating communities, much like the fires that are caused by climate change are devastating communities in Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec and other areas. This, again, is a similar crisis that is really having destructive impacts on communities across Canada.
We certainly see the impact of the toxic drug crisis in my community of Windsor-Essex, and we're seeing that there are weeks where we have two dozen overdoses in communities like mine. This is an absolutely critical issue. We know, based on the numbers provided by the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario, that there have been 3,800 deaths in Ontario from the toxic drug crisis. This is an issue that impacts all of us, and it's important that it receives due attention.
It's interesting. We clearly hear that my colleagues from Alberta are against safe supply and safe consumption sites. That was clearly spelled out by my Conservative colleague again today. However, it's interesting that they never talk about.... They always talk about what's happening in British Columbia, but never talk about what we're seeing in Alberta, despite the fact that Alberta doesn't have safe consumption sites and doesn't have decriminalization of safe supply.
There was a newspaper headline—I think it was in The Globe and Mail—that said that last year they had the highest number ever recorded of toxic drug deaths in Alberta, so it is facing a crisis. Alberta is seeing the number of deaths going up. It doesn't have the same systems in place and solutions in place that British Columbia does, but you never hear the Albertan Conservative MPs talk about the toxic drug crisis and opioid crisis in Alberta.