It's an interesting question. It depends on how auditable, I suppose, one would want the indication of the benefits to be.
In my experience, and in my prior position as a senior assistant deputy minister in the government as well, we wrestled with the question when we let a contract how many jobs were going to be created. We can't forecast that. We can use a rule of thumb, but it's the contractor who needs to tell us how they're going to deliver that project. While I would say that the government and the proponent can prescribe community benefits in their approach, you need to engage the bidders or the contractors in them telling us how they're going to deliver the work, and then we quantify that.