The biggest one would be funding, particularly from the non-profit side of things, and the availability of funds to bring it down to “deeply affordable”, where most of the individuals they would support are.
Zoning is another big one. I can speak to Ontario zoning, in particular, and the extended greater Toronto area, where, if more than three individuals are living together who use a wheelchair or are mobility-challenged, they need to have a special type of zoning—B3—which increases the pricing tremendously. In an apartment building, if three individuals wish to live by themselves, with no support from an agency, you could have everyone in the building by themselves with no supports in a wheelchair. The minute an agency supports them—more than three—then more building code standards are required.
Safety is essential. One of the reasons why Reena builds its own buildings is the accessibility and safety features. We can build them better than the developers. Developers come to us and say in no uncertain terms, “You're doing it the right way.” They just can't.