Again, I'm not the professional. We have professionals here who can speak to direct experience.
However, we have learned and we have a member in our club who is a survivor. She, along with other survivors who have been speakers at our events, has spoken to us and shared with us. They will talk about the fact that it takes years to overcome the trauma and particularly the stigma, and to overcome the actual physical challenges they have, such as getting back into society, because they're looking for housing and looking to be well cared for in their health and looking, perhaps, to be re-educated.
Reintegration into the community is what we're hearing, which is why we support Ncourage, which is a hub to bring the survivors in to where they are first treated for the immediate needs they have. It's a triaged approach. Then they have transitional housing and then they look for third-stage housing.
We support those groups and find those opportunities to provide funding that fills in those little places that perhaps sustainable funding does not cover. We have heard from them that they are so grateful for the work that's being done, particularly in Peel, where they have very much coordinated their approach very successfully.
All the groups come together in the Peel human trafficking committee, and we work together, from the service providers to the groups that provide the actual boots on the ground—the Elizabeth Fry Society, for example. The Peel police are very responsive to the needs of our survivors.