Thank you for that comment. I really appreciate it. It reinforces what we do.
It's absolutely critical. I can give you an example. We recently opened a program in London. The city created the housing and we're providing the support. We're talking about permanent housing. People live in their own unit, and they can access nursing and addiction care. It's an interdisciplinary service that's available.
Everybody came straight off the by-name priority list for homelessness. Most people had either a major mental health issue or a substance use issue. For 50% of the people who came into that building, the primary daily need was wound care, and quite often the wound arose from illicit drug use. You're talking about people emerging from situations of incredible difficulty and complexity.
What supportive housing does is offer an opportunity for people to stabilize. For many of our tenants, it's the first place they've been able to call home in their adult life. That ability to access housing and care is critical to people's survival.