Thank you for that.
Roughly speaking, then, when you include the temporary foreign workers, the number of jobs that would be thrown out of the country or exported down the line for Keystone and you look at Gateway, you're talking about 100,000 good Canadian jobs that are basically lost because of the mess that this government has created, rather than putting in place a really strong economic framework that allows for value-added jobs.
When you talk about the pace of development as well, in Alberta, you're also talking about lost jobs that come from the fact that we're not tying—the way Peter Lougheed certainly saw as part of his vision—directly into upgrading and refining development of the oil sands.
I guess that's why the Canadian Chamber of Commerce provided some pretty compelling figures just a few days ago, that 95% of jobs created in Canada over the last year were part-time, which means they're not family-sustaining.
Could you comment, then, on what this means in terms of economic costs? Poor management from this government in terms of the blessing that we have, as you say, is leading to this becoming very much a mixed blessing because of all the lost economic opportunity.