Thank you, and I’m really careful in how I want to say this because I don’t want to sound as if I’m stereotyping people in these situations. So I’m trying to be very careful, but if somebody left their windows open and the heat on, the everyday person would be paying for that. What happens from a Housing Corporation or an LHO point of view to make sure that doesn’t happen. The average everyday person who leaves the lights on has to take ownership when they go to work, the kids go to school, those types of things. If they leave all the lights on, they have to accept that if they want to do that, light an empty house or
dwelling, they have to accept the realities that they’re paying for it. I know the Minister is answering and I know he can’t speak directly for the LHO by saying what they say, but I guess I’m just missing the component here of not hearing how they educate folks to encourage them to come back. I mean, has the Housing Corporation looked at designing an upper limit and attaching more responsibility, sort of a grading process? When he talks about taking responsibility for the extra kilowatt usage, has the Housing Corporation looked at that?