Yes, thank you, Madam Chair. We've given out a total of 73 tickets today -- to date. Our approach has always been with education first and to, you know, encourage people as best we can to follow the public health orders and, in many cases, we just needed to provide education to ensure so people could be doing the right thing. But sometimes that didn't work and then we had to follow up with warnings, verbal and written warnings, about 1,400 or so of those given out. Sometimes that doesn't work, and we do have to have to follow up with tickets. So like I said, 73 of those. The majority of those were to individuals, and the vast majority of those had a fine of about $1,700. They are still going through the court system. So there are a variety different end points for those tickets to date. Some have been paid already. About -- I would -- about a third of them have been paid already. A third of them are before the court system still. And then there would be another third or so that would be for a variety of different reasons that we actually -- when it came to actually pursuing the fine and we decided not to proceed with it.
And in terms of revenue around those fines, that -- I believe that's the Department of Justice that would actually get the revenue, record the revenue associated with those fines. Thank you.