Homes are key infrastructure. My colleague from the YMCA talked about the social determinants. We're seeing that.
I was in Fort Nelson, B.C., just before the pandemic, as there was a movement to try to rebuild the forest economy in that part of northeastern B.C. The hospital there doesn't deliver babies. You have to go four hours away or, heaven forbid, if you have a complicated pregnancy, then you have to go to Vancouver for maybe a couple of months.
On cellphone coverage and broadband access, some of that social infrastructure is absolutely critical to making these communities attractive as a place where somebody would want to move their young family or start a young family.
There's the access to housing piece as well. There were some stats out of the federal government last year around the inaccessibility of affordable rental properties in rural Canada. I think the housing piece is one of a whole host of pieces that we have an opportunity to focus on. To me, that's a rural lens play and a regional play; it's probably not one-size-fits-all.
