Just to speak first to your comment on poverty, as Dave mentioned in our introduction, if you could reduce or eliminate poverty in Canada, you would go a long, long way to ending homelessness.
I don't want to just spew stats, but the number of individuals who we would categorize as chronically homeless is I think anywhere from 15% to 20%. So 20% or 15% of 3,100 is quite a reduction in the number of people who would be on the streets.
In Alberta specifically, a lot of our homeless individuals are working, and it's not a question of their being lazy or addicted or whatever. It's just that they cannot find an affordable place to live. That's very true of young people who have come from the east coast to try to find work. Last year we had 50,000 temporary foreign workers come to the province. We do have a lot of migrants who come also. For that entire population, the ones who do end up on the street, which is a considerable number, do so because of poverty. It is because the wage they're earning is minimum wage, and there's no way they can afford even a one-bedroom or a studio apartment on minimum wage.
So if you could eliminate poverty, you would go a long, long way to making our job of eliminating homelessness a lot easier.
I don't remember your other question.