Sure. Actually, first I do want to mention the fact that it was, for us, very important that it was identified in the legislation, under the factors that must be taken into account, that “the production constituted a potential public safety hazard in a residential area”. We often see crystal meth labs. When I was a chief of police in Durham, we had a multi-million-dollar explosion and fire, as well as cleanup, that easily could have cost a number of lives. So it is important for us that we saw that opportunity to attack that, because we do see that in some residential locations.
The second point for us is that we do see a high number of addicts on the streets who also have concurrent mental disorder. In fact, when I talk to psychiatrists at the Royal Ottawa Hospital, they will tell me the same thing, that the people they've dealt with in the past who had mental illness, or at least challenges from a mental illness perspective, they're now seeing also with concurrent drug addictions. So I think they are targeted by drug dealers and drug traffickers on our streets in this city, for sure. In fact, some experts would tell you that 25% to 40% of the drug addicts on our streets who we deal with every day also have concurrent mental illness. I think they are an opportunity for a lot of traffickers to increase their sales. We're not talking about people trying to make a few dollars. They don't care one second what happens to the people they sell crack cocaine to, certainly.