I would suggest that, as you said, it is up to each province to determine the best way forward for that province. I think if you look at the data in other countries, you'll see places like Australia, which has for-profit and not-for-profit, and it did very well. So the fundamental here isn't whether it's for-profit or not-for-profit. It's whether they had adequate infection prevention and control measures. It's whether they had adequate staffing and kept people in one location, not having multiple other jobs and bringing the virus in and out of the facilities.
It's about how those facilities are structured: Are they one bed and one bathroom per person, or are they multi-living, where you have a ward with four people together and they weren't isolated when they got COVID? Were they kept in the same room with those who didn't have COVID?
It was really the practice, and that's why we feel that the long-term care national standards are the right thing for us to focus on, because no matter how seniors choose to live—whether it's private, not private, home care—all systems need to be improved. We saw that through the tragedy of the outcomes of the last two waves of the pandemic.