Thank you, Mr. Chair.
There are a few things I could start off with. I could reply to Dr. Hanley's comment. This is deeply personal for me. I'm not here for sound bites, but I'm angry and I am frustrated. I've been very vocal and upfront about my family's struggles with this horrible epidemic. I've sat with family members of children who are now addicted and in the grips of addictions and also with families that have lost loved ones—young children, teens—to this horrible epidemic. This is deeply personal.
To our guests, thank you for being here. Thank you for the work that you're doing, but I have to say, whatever it is that we're doing is not working. Ms. Saxe, you even said so yourself: Since 2016, there have been 38,000 deaths. Whatever it is that we're doing is not enough. I get that you're one team and our provinces and others have to pitch in as well. It's not working.
My colleague talked about the experiment. An experiment is to see what works and what doesn't work. Throwing a billion dollars at it...and the leading cause of death for 10- to 18-year-olds in my province is overdose. It is not working.
What are the rates of diversion from government-funded safe supply?