Absolutely. The retrofit program was an excellent program; it had fantastic savings. It was in just about one out of every thirteen houses in Canada and it saved about 20%, on average, per home. Those are huge numbers. It was, as you say, a grant program. We were very supportive of it and still are.
Our recommendation for moving forward would be that a program almost exactly the same be done, but that it be done in a permanent renovation tax credit, rather than a grant program that can come and go and is actually very difficult to manage fiscally within a department, such as Natural Resources Canada. When it's coming through the tax system and is a more permanent indicator, you have the opportunity to have much longer-standing programming and to continue to allow homeowners to plan for these types of things. Moving to deep levels of energy retrofit takes time, and homeowners can't always do it in one year. A tax credit would enable you to do it over multiple years, and it also would have the strength of Revenue Canada in enforcement, which is also important.