Thank you for the question.
The big challenge for Kanaka Bar is that basically nobody has heard of the products we're using. We were able to find to find a product that's 40% cheaper than anything else on the market and that's fireproof, soundproof, windproof and rodent-proof. One of the things is that no matter who you are, you should really look at the products. These are cementitous in nature and can be built with.
If you look at this, they've been used internationally across the world. We're just really slow at bringing them into Canada. When I first ran, the one product.... If Thea is in design, she should know what AAC is, and if she doesn't, that's the problem with AAC. It's used in Australia, California, Mexico and Siberia. It's the highest-rated product in the world in terms of wind resistance and, I think, earthquake resistance.
When you look at something like the housing adaptation strategy or the national housing strategy, they don't like “new”. All I'm saying is that I want Sarah's projects to just be put in a different place where they're wanted. I want what everybody was talking about here. Don't get hung up on new design. Just steal what's working and build it. Otherwise, the 100,000 is not going to work. It's simply not going to work, because it's an excuse. NIMBY is an excuse. Zoning is an excuse. Archaeology is an excuse, and historical values.... UNDRIP is an excuse.
There are 600-plus bands there waiting to put up inclusive housing. Why won't people step up to that table, surrounded by municipalities? You have funding that's available to municipalities. How come the municipalities aren't speaking to me? I am always asking the municipalities, but do they want affordable housing?
We lost an entire town that was strategically located, and the way it looks here, they could put up affordable housing. I have a meeting with eight chiefs, the municipality and the regional district on the 16th, and we're saying that we're all in. We don't have any money, but if it takes five or six years to get an approval, then we're not going to hit the 2024 target numbers.
All I would say is that, if you have products that are inexpensive, that create jobs for British Columbians and Canadians, and that could be replicated, it will work.