If you take our square footage cost and then add development charges, fees and the cost of land, etc., our costs end up ultimately being less than a third of the overall cost. The longer the process draws out, the more the rest of the ancillary fees accumulate, and then it also slows down production in our plant.
I can give you an example, and we're probably not proud of this, but we built an outpatient clinic in western Canada. We finished the entire building at the request of the health authorities, and it sat in our plant with no building permit for months. Ultimately, the building permit issue got resolved. The building was delivered in five days, craned off the trucks in one day and operational very soon after that.
Delays naturally add costs and customers' incurring additional storage fees and additional fees for the general contractor who's waiting, and they're asking for standby fees. You can see how costs balloon in every instance, whether it's housing or health care or other infrastructure, when things slow down at the permitting level.