I don't know that the attestation itself is that difficult. We talked about cultural norms. I think the other thing we have to talk about is community norms. We have seniors in our community who have been going to the same cheque-cashing place for 30 years, to the same bar—that's actually their living room because they live in a little hotel room.
Identifications in our communities are also often because there's history: “I've known you this long”, right? We have doctors who don't ask for the care card because they've served that person for 20 years.
So I'm not sure if I'm answering your question. I think what I'm trying to say is in the absence of identification, people have created other norms and those norms are alive and strong in our community. Certainly we don't have a lot of people ask for attestations. We willingly provide attestations.
But not all of the people in poverty are living in a shelter either. So I think that's the other thing. There are a lot of people in our community who are what I would call under-housed. So they're sharing small places, or they're living in the single-room occupancy hotels that I'd talked about. So not all poor, homeless, or precariously housed people have that option for the attestation. Did I answer your question?