Thank you very much for the question.
Build Canada Homes will define the affordability benchmark to track incomes of households for which housing will be affordable. I'll give you the three elements of this.
Deeply affordable units will be less than 30% of before-tax median household income for households with low or very low income in their regions, so fixed-income or minimum-wage earners are the groups that we expect will benefit. Second, affordable units will be less than 30% of before-tax median household income for households with moderate or medium income in their region—this is, for example, essential workers such as construction workers and care providers. Then, obviously, there are market units as well, which will be delivered by BCH as part of mixed-income developments to partially support the cost of building affordable and deeply affordable units.
This was a really important adoption of this approach to affordability as part of the investment policy of Build Canada Homes. It will have a focus on social housing, and that will be a significant focus of the types of investments that it will be undertaking.