The one thing that this does, no matter whether you're looking at building with engineered wood or regular wood, is that it would help the small and medium-sized mills across the country to thrive. Structurlam, in my home town of Penticton, buys wood from all over my riding and beyond. Most of the douglas fir it gets for its beams comes from a company called Kalesnikoff in Castlegar, on the other side of my riding. It's a small, family-owned mill and they really appreciate that extra business.
I think Bill Downing mentioned that they got the contract to rebuild the Microsoft campus in Washington state and with that, they put in an order for $4 million to Canfor, which has mills all across British Columbia and Alberta.
The thing about this wood construction is that you can use any kind of wood, whether it's black spruce from the north or lodgepole pine from beetle-killed areas, you can use all that wood. If we have indigenous communities—and a lot of indigenous communities in my riding have forest companies that they operate—it would help those companies.