That's a difficult one because ultimately the tax credit moneys are always the last moneys in the door, and that has to do with the fact that they're triggered by the filing of a corporate income tax return and the various tax credit claim forms.
There are risks associated with interim financing, the tax credits, or paying them up front. Some of the risks would involve or include whether or not a company or a production actually meets the CAVCO Canadian certification criteria at the end of the day. It's one thing to go forward with a production budget and a plan of who your key creative individuals are going to be, and meeting those points and making sure you meet the expenditure limits required under CAVCO guidelines. At the end of the day, however, you could be in a situation where, if you haven't had production accountants or producers who have been watching those costs closely, you do not meet those expenditure criteria. I've been in those situations.
You don't want to have a situation where the federal government is supplying a tax credit up front with those risks occurring, unless they're mitigated. There would have to be a clear process in place to eliminate or mitigate those risks to the greatest extent possible, so that you're not faced with having money out there that should not have gone to those producers in the first place.
Do I think it's a good opportunity to help producers? Absolutely.