Yes, certainly, and it is directly related to the pandemic.
We maintain a by-name list. It's available on our website. We have public-facing tableau worksheets that illustrate over time how many individuals experience homelessness, and you can cross tabulate that with various other indicators.
Certainly, within the context of the pandemic, we have seen a couple of things. One is that housing stability has been compromised by individuals who may be co-housing or in precarious housing circumstances are not able to continue that because of the need for their cohorts to isolate, or just that it's been more tenuous. Again, to the earlier point about poverty, poverty is being exacerbated for many who don't qualify for various income sources and are being hit hard during the pandemic.
It's definitely connected to the pandemic, and I would say again that it exposes for us, with regard to our system, just how we need to really reorient around prevention so that it does not become an ongoing experience.