Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, social housing is pretty well for low income people. The way that we establish the rate scale is to basically take...If you pay $32, we basically have a low income wage and also, as your wage increases, your rent also increases to the level of your wage. Once you exceed 30 percent of your income, you pay the $1,400 a month because your wages...based on 30 percent of your
income is exactly what you are going to be paying, based on national building numbers that we use. I think that is how it is set. Social housing was supposed to be for social clients, for low income people. In order to balance that out, these are the levels that we use. It is based on the income. The higher your income, the higher your rent. The lower your income, you pay $32.