Mr. Chairman, if I may answer the member's question, thank you for asking it, because I think the committee needs to recognize that an exit strategy does not have to tie to criminality or to the Criminal Code or to police enforcement. It's often situated with the best agencies, or aboriginal agencies, or agencies that are familiar with the organizations and the communities, so that's one means. There's always a money pitch, right?
But even without the money, it shouldn't be a mechanism of criminal law to assist the social determinants of health, to assist the right programming. So in criminalizing it, we actually do harm. It touches on section 7, life, liberty, and security. If you're incarcerating the sex worker or as other people are defining them, the victim, in order to save them or protect them, you're still breaching their constitutional section 7 rights. There has to be a better means, a better mechanism. Exiting should be done at the choice of sex worker, and with the communities that are best equipped to handle their geographical or demographical groups.