For example, in the 1970s and 1980s, CMHC funded buildings in coordination with provincial health care departments, so instead of being given massive amounts of money up front, providers were given funding over a period of 50 years to cover mortgages and maintenance costs for a building. By the end of the 50 years, the cost of the property was paid; the cost of the initial development work was paid through the mortgage, and included in those funding models were some resources for capital reserve funds, so that you were able to sustain the building over that time.
We have two such buildings out of our four buildings that were through that particular model, and we have a third building that was funded by CMHC. All three of those buildings are still fully operational and reasonably well maintained and deeply affordable. The housing portion of that is rent-geared-to-income housing, which means that people on social assistance or on ODSP, the disability plan, are paying the rent amount that they have and are not having to spend their money for food and other things on rent, which they would have to do if they were in the private sector, where rents are much higher.