I'll say that the question is a challenging one to unpack wholly, because when we start to consider the full financial impacts of something like that occurring, we're looking at the immediate financial impact to the municipal landowners themselves. It is very costly to undertake repairs on something like that.
There are costly road repairs. You're looking at overtime for cleanup crews repairing these roadways during a flood event and finance departments maintaining all the records and that sort of stuff. I don't have any experience personally on providing the cost of that, but some of the other flooding events out there have been pretty substantial. I think there's documented evidence on how costly they are, whether in Ontario or across the country.
If I may speak to the soft shoreline techniques in our area, generally, through our personal experience in our area, they're not heavily promoted because they just can't withstand the wave energy that's out there from the natural forces, so when we take that into consideration, we have to ensure that a new development that would be going in would be protected for a minimum number of years. Some of the soft shore techniques that are out there may not meet that minimum standard that has to be met—