One, it could partner with the city in one of the most successful programs that we have under way now, which is a fairly robust suite of incentive programs. We found that in our downtown core, and I can imagine Sarnia would be similar, the market is not in a place where it can necessarily create the kinds of residential units we'd like to see. That is why we've tried to incentivize it with our development charge exemptions, with our zero-interest loans, and with our brownfield remediation grants and other types of incentives.
That is very much where we want to see a lot of the new housing happen, but we know that it's not where the market is pushing that housing. That was one of the points I made in my opening comments. Partnering with municipalities on those types of programs, which currently we are funding entirely on our own, would be helpful.