That's been a really key and interesting question for a lot of municipalities in Canada: how to essentially incent or entice private developers to include an element of social housing within private builds.
Clearly, the rental market has been somewhat on the decline. There's not a lot of builders that are into the rental market these days. There have been some municipalities that have essentially mandated that private development needs to include a certain percentage of units set aside for social housing. Clearly, we would support that, and we would encourage other municipalities to consider doing so.
If we look, for example, at a city like Ottawa, where we have a light-rail transit project that's about to get going, that creates billions of dollars of value in the land surrounding that LRT project. If private developers are looking to develop on those lands, and that's going to be valuable land, it's a prime opportunity for the city, in this case, to essentially require that again a certain percentage of those new units be set aside.
We see it as a win-win project. The private sector is still going to be doing very well, but it also helps meet the needs of the social sector.