There are two important distinctions. Now you're getting a fairly traditional investment model, where you say you put in block money, you put in this much and you get this many units. I think the opportunity here is first to take advantage of the existing investment. A lot of the funding the federal government's put in over 30 or 40 years in social housing across Canada is in older assets that could be redeveloped.
So first you get to capture the equity you've already invested and you can redevelop those properties and lever up off of rental investment, or other things.
Second, you will bring forward the more skilled and more sophisticated non-profit housing operators, which I think would allow you to further lever or bring in extra money from the market, as opposed to a dollar in being a dollar worth of value for you. I think you can lever your investment much more significantly here.
There is a lot of money waiting in Canada that is eager to be invested in the system, whether it is a low-income housing tax credit or some kind of loan guarantee structure.