Thank you for that.
In my previous life, I was also in politics, but at the municipal and regional levels in Ontario. We had some areas of responsibility over health through our local health agencies. Part of that responsibility is communication and educating residents on how they can help prevent the spread in this instance and, really, education on risks.
If we're looking at workplaces right now as the number one concern, I noticed your six priority areas don't cover borders. The kind of political.... I fully recognize your comments off the top. I'm not asking you to criticize a political decision, but if these are the areas of concern, and workplaces are the biggest threat, when it comes to the resources and the efforts to communicate with Ontarians in this case, would it not serve the broader public health measures to invest in resources that focus on the hot-spot areas or focus on the areas of concern to also arm and educate the public in those areas that are most affected right now? In putting communication priority on things like the borders, which account in Ontario for less than 2% of transmission, aren't we missing an opportunity to educate and help Canadians in stopping the spread? Is that a missed opportunity to educate our communities?