I'm trying to understand the question. I guess what I would say is that we have an aging rental stock and we have members who take their buildings and their residents very seriously. Many offer all kinds of resident support programs, but these are buildings that are very old. They require significant capital investments to upgrade them and modernize them. In some cases, again, that must be approved by the landlord and tenant board. In the case of Ontario, there's an opportunity to apply to receive some increase in rent. It doesn't cover the whole cost, and nor should it, but there's an opportunity to recover some part of that improvement through an additional rent increase. It's something that is taken very seriously by our members.
We do have an aging rental stock. It does need to be maintained so that we can go on and live in our rental housing system for the next 50 years and beyond. We are at a point in time now when we do have to talk about how we upgrade and modernize these buildings and, given the systems we have in place, about the best way to go about paying for that. It is a difficult conversation in some cases, but it has to happen.