Let me do my best to help put the conversation on track.
First of all, I do believe sincerely that it will take federal investment, as well as provincial and municipal investments, to get out of the housing crisis. I don't view this as being a strategy to spend our way out of the housing crisis. It's a recognition that it's going to take investments, particularly when you're dealing with non-market housing, to actually meet the needs of communities and the families who live within them.
I think we have a 30-year experiment of cuts to affordable housing in Canada that has proven conclusively that you cannot solve a housing crisis by making cuts, but you certainly can create one. I vow not to take that approach.
Despite our disagreement on the role of the federal government making investments versus cuts to escape the housing crisis, you'll perhaps surprisingly find that I have a lot of agreement with you on the use of federal land, particularly on the issue of the process of declaring as surplus certain properties.
I've seen the Canada Post office in Metrotown. I've gone to Burnaby, and I've seen the post office surrounded by towers that are 40 or 50 storeys. It could be providing homes to additional people. Of course, Canada Post operates as a Crown corporation, independent of decisions taken by the government of the day.
One of the policies I intend to review, in collaboration with my colleagues, is how we can better unlock opportunities for properties that have not yet been declared surplus. Let's not look only at Canada Post Corporation and other Crown corporations. There are government departments that conduct business that is not necessarily incompatible with housing. I've had a conversation with a number of my cabinet colleagues to identify some of those opportunities.
With respect to your other questions, you've noted a couple of other examples, in Whitehorse and with the agricultural farm. There may be unique nuances. If you're concerned about the issue that played out with shadows—largely a conversation between Ag Canada and the City of Ottawa—I have put on paper my objection to policies around shadow cover getting in the way of housing. There may be something that needs to be discussed for the operational needs of the agricultural farm, but I'll leave it to my colleague to work that out with the City of Ottawa.
My view is that we need to look at every opportunity to reform our policies, including properties that have not been declared surplus, to identify opportunities to build more housing.