Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for being here today.
Mr. Vaughan, it would be helpful to underscore what you said about the Quebec government's co-operation on this issue, which started to emerge more clearly in 2016. As you said, it didn't happen overnight. What is new and more recent, however, is the significant number of people crossing the border at Roxham Road. I was quite glad to hear you point out the co-operation you received from the Quebec government. Given the success achieved under the agreement between the federal and Quebec governments, the effort bears repeating elsewhere.
You set up triage centres and began working closely with the Canada Border Services Agency and RCMP. An entire network of non-governmental organizations is also involved, working to support the efforts of both the federal and provincial governments. A regionalized approach, if you will, was taken to deal with the challenge posed by the refugee claimants. Could you tell us once again what was done in Quebec's case? How do we replicate what worked in Quebec, especially in Ontario?
It is also a matter of housing. Right now, Montreal is at 50% capacity, which means that the approach and the agreement with the Quebec government are working.