Thanks. Before I go any further, I should acknowledge the advocacy work you've been doing on that specific parcel in Halifax, which helped inform part of the decision-making around what we want to do as we design some of these programs.
I think you've described it the right way. There are, largely, two benefits to having the strategy we've adopted around federal lands. The first that you mentioned is cost. There are certain costs that are within the control of governments or that the government can introduce a solution to, and there are others outside the scope of what the government can influence directly.
In the case of land, we actually have an opportunity to reduce the input cost, because the price of land, particularly in large urban centres, is driving up the cost and reducing the number of homes that are ultimately built. By putting land on the table, we can help reduce that cost, provided we get a good deal. If you sell that land off, you don't necessarily get the same value proposition because you don't pull the cost of land out of the input cost of construction. We're proposing, in most instances, to move forward with long-term leases offered at a low price to reduce the cost of construction in exchange for commitments around affordability.
On the supply piece, in addition to making land available that would not otherwise be made available, we have the opportunity to do more. More broadly, properties like the Canada Post project, which I know you're interested in, have an opportunity to contribute more supply, over and above the usual disposition process around federal lands. That's because when you enter into a leasing arrangement, you have an opportunity to expand the scope beyond properties that are declared surplus and to include properties that are not exclusively for housing and could still serve some other public purpose. When you look at the possibility of adding homes to a property that a Canada Post location could have, for example, you see that it could still serve as a Canada Post location, but it could also serve as a housing development. Where that's possible, we don't want to limit ourselves only to those that have to go through the lengthier disposition process, in which you also forgo the cost advantage of making lands available, without adding that input cost towards construction.