Certainly, I do. That's a good question.
The national housing strategy does set out to try to do that. There are two elements of the national housing strategy: One is to preserve what we have and the other is to add new stock. Even at $20,000, $30,000 or $40,000 of retrofit per existing social housing unit, it's a heck of a lot cheaper than $400,000 of subsidy for new stuff, so absolutely, we should be doing that.
I think we need to look at the quantum of funding that's currently flowed through the bilateral agreements with the provinces and territories specifically to provide funding to existing non-profit and co-op operators so that, first of all, they're able to maintain the low rents they currently have as the subsidy agreements expire, which they've been doing over the last number of years.
Second, many of these are now 35- to 40-year-old buildings with significant capital expenditure requirements. They need to know they have enough capital funding to upgrade the buildings. I think the program is there; we just need to make sure the quantum of resourcing that's there is sufficient as the units expire incrementally.