Sure. We are currently looking at developing some indigenous complex care, which is intensive supportive housing in British Columbia, and we're running into zoning issues in these developments. They're not new developments. They are builds with renovations, and the concern we're facing is that, in some communities, we can have only six units. We can't go over that because then that's too many in the community for these complex care needs, and the reality is that the people who will be using complex care are already in the community. They're just street-entrenched or living in shelters, so why is zoning getting in the way of creating really solid opportunities for indigenous people to access support, attachment and the full realm of services to have a stable life?
We definitely have, over the years, faced that problem, especially around Nimbyism.
I'm sorry—I'm not a specialist on zoning, but we are definitely facing it in complex care.