Thank you for the question.
I think that is a somewhat complicated question for the following reason. There is an offence already called mischief to property that involves a lot of different kinds of misbehaviour towards property, public and private property, and also critical infrastructure.
The new offence that's been proposed for obstructing access to health facilities really targets one kind of misbehaviour towards property, and that is obstructing or impeding access into the property. It doesn't cover other types of criminal conduct such as damaging property, destroying property or rendering the property inoperative. It could be that, in the case of critical infrastructure, those are the kinds of behaviours that are more at issue, the kinds of wrongdoing that we're more likely to see, and they are not included in this specific offence in this legislation.
I think it's somewhat of a more complicated and perhaps different kind of issue in terms of the behaviour that people engage in when they're targeting critical infrastructure as opposed to health facilities.