I'm a, “yes, and”, guy, so yes, there's credentialing, if you will, so the interventions are centred on the person, as opposed to centred on the deliverer. The person is the point, not what they do. They need to be connected to the other parts of life, because they'll either help or aggravate the addiction.
One of the directors on our board is the executive director of the Ottawa Mission, and the Ottawa Mission's mission is not shelter, it's recovery, but it includes shelter. They see the whole person, and they try to diagnose and then case manage the person through all the things that are necessary to support recovery, starting with addictions in those cases where it's a factor. However, it's not addictions alone, it's addictions and vocations, addictions and preventive medicine, addictions and financial well-being, addictions and— It's not a thing, it's one of the things that's aggravating another thing. It's a symptom of a deeper problem.
I think it's a “yes, and” proposition.