Absolutely, and we have a good example of that in Vancouver in one of our projects called the Vancouver Aboriginal Children's Village. In that project, we built a cultural space on the main floor. We built offices that support the tenants and the occupants, who are in the building for support services, and they should be part and parcel of one another.
In B.C., the provincial government looks at that and says the commercial piece of the building cannot be more than 33% of the overall building structure. We have to then find the financing to support the commercial part of that, and that often makes it very difficult for us to complete these projects.
We used our own equity, by the way, that we acquired throughout the years to create the necessary funding to fund the commercial piece to the building as we moved forward, but that, generally, was not provided by CMHC or the provinces.