 I think something that has touched all of us in every single community around our province and that is the epidemic of drug overdoses that we've seen not just here but all over North America. Fentanyl has become a real plague and I think all of us see people and know people for whom it has had absolutely devastating consequences. Families that are so irreparably harmed and then for those of us who haven't had a direct experience of it, the knowledge and the fear that any of our children, our grandchildren, our nieces, our nephews, our brothers or sisters could somehow, through recreational drug use, ingest fentanyl and wind up dead. We were the first in the country to declare this a public health emergency. We were the first to assemble a joint task force. We were the first to de-schedule the life-saving antidote naloxone. And today we are the first to establish a dedicated centre on substance use. This will include a $10 million investment, $5 million for the inaugural BC Centre on Substance Use, the very first of its kind in Canada. And I want to thank the man who spearheaded this initiative, Dr. Evan Wood. He has been a leader, a fighter and a visionary on behalf of people who need help. The other $5 million is going to be going to the budget for the task force to help them continue their vital work, making sure that they are making naloxone more available and increasing our testing capabilities. They are going to continue with us to work with Ottawa to crack down on fentanyl entering our borders. But we all should acknowledge, we all must acknowledge, that every single one of these deaths is not just tragic, it is absolutely preventable. And we must stem this epidemic on our streets. We must protect our children.