Certainly, fluctuations in lumber price affect everybody. Those at the lower end of the affordability spectrum tend to be impacted more, of course.
The strange thing about the way the situation could work is that, in some cases, tariffs might end up lowering prices initially in Canada because of lack of demand. The problem then becomes having to shut down mills just to balance the supply-demand equation, and then prices will stabilize or start to go up. Then, hopefully, at some point, we're looking to increase housing supply, and then there's more pressure on lumber prices in Canada and they go up even further.
It's a very tricky and precarious position that we're currently in, and it affects everybody on the spectrum. It affects the lower-income Canadians. It affects anybody looking to move up. It affects those looking to provide affordable housing and social housing, because their costs go up exactly the same way. It's definitely a big challenge.