Thank you very much.
Perhaps going to the team in the City of Toronto as well as Working for Change, one of the areas that we broached more broadly—not necessarily our committee, but certainly as parliamentarians—is that adequate supports don't exist for those who are struggling with mental illness and with addictions as well. We know that harm reduction is an important way of empirically helping people who are living in these situations, but we know that there are immense challenges, certainly legal ones, when it comes to providing the kind of harm reduction services that are required, whether it's safe injection sites or whether the kind of medical work that needs to be done. Of course, as we know, when there isn't that help, the cycle of poverty, addiction, and mental illness continues for people in these situations.
I'm wondering if, perhaps, you see the need for the federal government to further support harm reduction and lift the legal barriers and the legislation that's in place that prevent safe injection sites from opening. Is this an important way of dealing with poverty and mental health?