Our focus, in terms of the capital gains inclusion rate and who we see it impacting in terms of how it may benefit us with our affordable housing crisis, is really those large corporations and those REITs, those financiers who have come into our housing market more and more. We understand, especially in older communities, that many of these dwellings have been bought as secondary properties or investment properties.
What I would say—and I admit that I, myself, am selling a secondary property in the next year and will, in fact, be taxed more for that—is that it's better to be taxed when you have the money than when you don't. That's exactly what's happening in this scenario. We're taxing people when they have the money available to them, and we're taxing them fairly. We're taxing them closer to what people pay when they make a wage, and that is actually critical for tax fairness. There's really no good reason to argue why someone who's been able to make an investment and buy equity and assets gets a lower tax rate than someone who hasn't been afforded that opportunity.