Speaking to Toronto, we have the benefit of a very broad spectrum of community services that are committed to the program, everything from harm reduction providers to a client card that our graduates made up that is provided in the safe crack pipe and needle distribution kits to increase awareness about the program. We have housing providers, we have schools, but the community also provides governance to the program. We have a community advisory committee and numerous other subcommittees looking at the specific needs of our participants that the community is part of. So they have some direct involvement in how the program evolves. It's a unique partnership because they are partners in governance as well as in providing services to the program. There needs to be really broad-based community support for these to be successful. In Toronto we've been lucky that we have that broad support.
This program started as a three-part partnership--treatment, justice, and the community. We were all there in the consultations that led up to the program. Eight years later, the community is still every bit as involved as it was before we started our original consultation process.