Perhaps I'll start and then I'll turn it to my colleague, Ms. Bowers.
There's very close collaboration between Infrastructure Canada and CMHC on the work of the national housing strategy and some of the work from the co-investment fund that funds shelters.
In the case of encampments, Infrastructure Canada just did a survey of 72 communities across the country to better understand what the issues are. Why are people using encampments? Are there particular barriers within shelters? Is it capacity? Is it because of barriers regarding family, allowing pets or measures regarding addiction and support services? As we look at programs going forward, we can be better informed and work in closer collaboration with our communities.
Certainly one concern right now is shelter capacity. Over COVID, there were permanent reductions of shelter capacity, They are just coming back. Temporary shelters were used.
As we look at different programs, I think that close collaboration between the community entities that are delivering Reaching Home and the opportunities from programming—whether it's from CMHC with the bricks and mortar or from Reaching Home, which provides the wraparound services—really requires that alignment.
That's why we've also created a federal-provincial-territorial working group on supportive housing and homelessness to not just work closely among ourselves but work closely with provinces and municipalities to make sure that all of our levers are being aligned to be most effective.