Thank you very much for the question.
I think it's just about providing appropriate and affordable supportive housing. That's what we've done with INNclusion.
INNclusion is a very inexpensive way to do it. The organization is actually renting a home in the community, and we're working with partners who have expertise to wrap the right supports around LGBTQ2S+ youth moving forward.
I think you're absolutely right. Many youth, including 2SLGBTQ youth, are staying at home in unsafe situations. We just need to provide more options moving forward. We have about 25% to 40% of youth who experience homelessness identifying as being from this community. We just need to open up more, and it has to not be part of another housing program because the supports are a little different and specialized.