Certainly there is. I'm a member of a number of different groups of mayors across the province. City mayors have that issue. One of the areas they were hopeful on was the backing off of the province in relation to education revenues; there's some push-back on the provincial side of that. We've made our specific application through the urban municipality association for our tax considerations to segregate the machinery and equipment. They require Municipal Government Act changes and they require the will of the province, or the whim of the province, to do so.
In relation to the amount of revenues that go back to the province from the royalties, I think we contribute, from this region, about $1 billion currently, doubling next year as the production increases and going up as we go along. But essentially what we're looking at is about $3.9 billion going back into federal revenues as well, so I think you participate at a good extent as well with the economy generated from the Wood Buffalo region and other oil sands developers. That's where I come back down to; it's nice to sign a cheque over to the province, but it doesn't always get to the municipality. My suggestion on the regional tripartite agreement would be a very specific three-way unison that could achieve what's important on the strategic agenda.