Yes, and what's good about that is.... I was talking with members of the Atlantic caucus about the idea that perhaps there is some economic development. You think about the softwood lumber issue in New Brunswick. There's a part of the country that has the resources needed to build these modular units. If we're going to move to modular units, and I think that's where the industry is going—I think we've gone from six to 16 providers across the country in the last two years, and we're working with the Canadian Standards Association to try to standardize this so that they're pre-approved in the sense—we can start setting up to create jobs through federal investments and take advantage of our natural resources to decentralize the construction and delivery of these modular housing units because they work whether they're three units, six units or 12 units. And that's an off-the-shelf, ready to go, approved high-quality, highly affordable housing program. You could literally build factories in every part of the country to meet the housing needs of Canadians right across the country. In fact, some of the resource providers in Saskatchewan, some of the folks who build temporary housing for the resource sector, are pivoting to modular housing to take advantage of this opportunity.
On February 4th, 2021. See this statement in context.