Thank you. I will if I may.
The challenge here is that the public anger is directed at the federal government and not at the local municipal governments. There is no Canadian housing market. They're all local housing markets, and your neighbourhood's prices go up and down. Nimbyism is local. People's reluctance and resistance to new development in their own neighbourhoods is a root cause.
We know about NIMBY—not in my backyard. There is also a thing called NIMTOO—not in my term of office. That is what happens with local governments when local councillors realize that their electorate is resisting new construction. They say, “It's a great plan to have a new building, but not in my term of office.” Put NIMBYs and NIMTOOs together and you are in this situation.
The challenge can be resolved only if the federal government and provincial governments—because municipalities are creatures of the provinces—take a bigger role in the land development approval processes. The federal government and provincial governments are taking all the blame for housing prices. If that is the case, then they should take a bigger role or ask for a bigger role in land development processes to get rid of the bottlenecks that are creating this humongous challenge of not building enough houses.