Yes.
Recently, that's made headlines in Quebec. I'm thinking in particular of the $900 million from the Housing Accelerator Fund, which mayors discussed at the end of the Homelessness Summit. It takes a long time. It can take up to three years for an agreement to be signed with Quebec following a federal announcement. That was the case for the first, second and third phases of the Rapid Housing Initiative. So we need to find a way to get the money flowing more quickly. We think this would be possible if programs targeted social housing and gave provinces with social housing programs the right to opt out with compensation. That would be one approach.
Another approach, in the very short term, would be to inject new funding into the contributions component of the National Housing Co‑Investment Fund. This component enables projects to be unlocked and financial packages to be completed, as I mentioned. We're not ardent defenders of this fund, but technical resource groups in Quebec tell us that new funding would be very useful, pending other, more comprehensive federal announcements on social housing.