InSite has a place upstairs that's called Onsite, which people don't really hear about. People go in and out of there and back onto the streets. The fact is that we just have no place for people to go on demand. I would agree with everybody at the table here that the person who wants treatment usually comes to me in a very desperate situation, saying, “Hey, you know what, I'm ready for treatment.” They're crying. They look like they're ready to go. They've been sleeping in the alley. It's over.
That window is only for that period of the day. You can't say to them to go and use drugs for another two weeks and then we'll find them somewhere—if we can find a place for them. Then, when they do get in, they go through the system for a week and come out again, because some of the programs are so short. Then they're back in the alley, and who sleeps in an alley without doing drugs? Nobody, I mean, it's just impossible in the cold and snow. It just doesn't happen—