I think, with respect to the....
Thank you for your question.
The building code is headed in a decent direction right now, with different provinces looking to harmonize around the national building code. There are more efforts in that direction.
Honestly, I think the bigger problem, right now, in terms of code harmonization—because the provinces are headed in the right direction—is municipalities doing what we call “code by other means”, trying to implement things that are actually building code measures through local requirements. That becomes very difficult to handle. It's very difficult to work in different municipalities. Frankly, it can become dangerous, as well, because municipalities aren't well set up to look at all the unintended consequences of doing one thing.
I'll give you an example. In Alberta, right now, we have issues around something that was done for fire safety, which resulted in moisture in attics and moisture coming through ceilings. I won't go into the details, but that's what happens when you're not going through a proper code process.
To your question about how to harmonize to make it easier, the provinces are headed in the right direction. I think we need municipalities to follow provincial building codes that are, in turn, based on the national building code. That will help a lot in terms of productivity and standardization.
It's the same with products and materials. Some provinces have different requirements for different products—different standards. That's a big problem if you're a manufacturer in Canada. For example, we have some great window manufacturers that have to manufacture to different standards depending on what province they're going to. At the same time, if a window is staying within a province, it doesn't have to adhere to the Energy Efficiency Act. We could definitely clean all of that up. That would make for much better productivity.