With respect to short-term rental, of course, those are units that are not available for long-term residential uses. The counter side to that, though, is that these are maybe units that wouldn't be built if the availability of short-term rental wasn't there in the first place. The higher returns to putting out a unit for short-term rental probably incentivized a lot of purchases of units that then maybe wouldn't have been built had that demand not been there for those units.
At this point in time, there's maybe a potential windfall. If you were to take those units and say that we're going to get rid of short-term rental, that could increase supply to the rental market as a one-off, but it wouldn't necessarily lead to continued growth and supply in the long run. The rules have changed, and now the incentive to invest in those units is gone.