That's a good question. It would take much more time for me to get into it at this point. I would love to be able to do some research around it.
However, I think fundamentally we do have some tools available to us now. In British Columbia, for instance, we have just reinstated the Human Rights Commission. Also, we're currently working on a project locally. We're trying to find some funding to do a project on how zoning and human rights can be at odds. We're currently looking at how to address that and how permit hearings, for instance, can be a place where people are being actively discriminated against. Local municipal officials are challenged in that they want to build more, but at the same time they have neighbours who are actively discriminating against people who are going to be living in those homes.
I can't say there's one answer at this point. I would love to do some more work looking into a framework, but we have the legislative pieces there and we have the human rights code. We need to be able to knit those two together and then work with local governments particularly, because I think that is where a lot of this takes place. We have many examples I can share of what's happening here in Victoria around this to actively work with them and the local neighbourhood organizations involved in the permit hearing and land use processes to educate them about what behaviour contravenes our human rights.