To be fair on this, I think that was the least of our problems. Partly it's because we had a very strong network of community members who are in support of the program. There were conversations, dialogues, and case consultation and case networking, so there was a lot of trust among the different groups that we were not going to do anything that would jeopardize anybody else.
We also recognize that everybody in Canada has issues. There's no hierarchy of equality or inequality. I don't think that is a problem, but the problem is often the limited funding. For instance, DAWN may have 10 cases, but we can fund only one of them.