Thank you for the question.
There are a couple of things I would say.
First and foremost, I think you see how municipalities and provinces across the country are stepping up, in many cases, with regulations on what qualifies for short-term rental. That's not uniform. Obviously, different municipalities have different approaches. Sometimes it's province-wide. I think, in the case of Quebec and B.C., what the fall economic statement did primarily was put in place tax measures to reinforce local regulations or rules around qualifications for units to be eligible as short-term rentals. Basically, what we're doing is saying that from the tax system standpoint, your income tax—if you're claiming any deductions for running a short-term rental unit—has to be compliant with local or provincial regulations. It has to be registered and, effectively, be a legal unit to rent. That's to provide reinforcement for jurisdictions choosing to go down that road.
The second piece is an offer to provide enforcement assistance for municipalities, going forward. That program has not been launched yet, but it will be coming. That, again, is to help with enforcement of local regulations that are looking to limit short-term rental usage.