Yes.
The one thing I would also like to add to this is that we're especially compromised when it comes to shelters, transitional housing, and housing. Housing has to accommodate families: parents with disabilities, where the mother may be disabled and also the children may be disabled. Housing is mostly geared as single one-bedroom apartments, and a lot of our women and their children come into care because of it. That is one huge problem.
Also even in addictions kinds of settings, in our homeless shelters, women cannot stay as long as men. There are fewer beds. Those kinds of things are absolutely crucial in the housing area.