It's an excellent question.
Another good example is hygiene. For a long time, if anybody was on a construction site or worked on construction sites up until the pandemic, hygiene lagged drastically behind.
If an office worker or an engineer was working on site, they would use their own washroom facility. You go on to a construction site and have to use porta-potties in the middle of winter. We have dark hours. People are working all different hours.
When we look at washrooms and hygiene, that ties into the health and safety piece of it as well. Supporting people with prevention and getting the message out to parents.... A lot of parents are making the decisions when it comes to having conversations with their teenagers. We work with the local workforce planning boards. We get out to schools and we do that [Technical difficulty—Editor].
It's a conversation about making construction workers more human, as Mr. Strickland spoke to, because we have a high suicide rate. It's the third highest suicide rate in Canada. Mental health is something. We're working on pilots with Health Canada right now on opioid addiction and education. There are lots of things that we're doing locally.