As a long-time city councillor in Hamilton, I think everyone on my council, irrespective of their political stripe, celebrated the national housing strategy and the investments that came with it. I think if you were to poll those people, not just in Hamilton but, I think, across the country, most people—to the member's point prior to mine—expected more for those who are in core housing need. We expected more on the subsidy side of things, addressing housing needs for seniors, those who are disabled, veterans. You have the list of the vulnerable populations that the national housing strategy seeks to assist, and I think we expected more there and less on the market side. I agree with your opening comments when you said there's room for the private sector, and I'll have questions about that later today.
On the issue of subsidy and deeply affordable units, to your words with the previous members, how do we change the policy direction? When do we look at the national housing strategy and say, look, the pandemic's changed a lot of things; it's time to maybe push a reset button; we need deeply affordable units and less support for market rents? Can you help me with that in terms of how we can assist you in that regard?