Maybe she'll be a nurse, yes.
Thank you for your question. As a matter of fact, we are committed to doing such a study writ large across the country. The only reason we had been focusing on Toronto was that there was a particular need there in terms of the way the new formula was applied. I'm not suggesting it was purposely so, but it left them with an inequity treatment that resulted in an impact of hundreds of millions of dollars.
That said, you're absolutely right, every airport across the country needs relief on that front. We are going to do a study in the field, which we expect and hope to have done by the end of November. We have done one for Toronto, through the international association of airlines, and it's shown that if the Toronto solution were implemented, 300,000 passengers annually would be the expected increase, with $300 million in additional economic activity for southern Ontario, 3,000 jobs annually, and $62 million annually in net tax revenue gain.