Is there any data on that specifically? You may point me to somebody else, but I'd be curious to know. You talked about in the report, and it makes sense to me, that between 2018 and 2023, there was a substantial 60% increase in build costs. I imagine a lot of that accounts for the 2021 to 2023 period, which, of course, was the pandemic, with the supply chain disruptions and all the things that drove up costs.
How much of that, from what you understand, would be driven by the point you just raised, which is that when we're building a new home, it's very different from a home that would have been built in the 1940s or 1950s? We're taking into account these climate resiliency pieces. Do we have an understanding of where some of the major costs are for the materials that are needed?
I note, for example, a shortage of workers. I finished looking at a CBC article from Membertou, Nova Scotia, not long ago that says there is funding available, but part of the problem is that they don't have the ability, even once they've tapped members of their own community, to fulfill the labour needs. Can you just shed some light?
John, am I out of time?