I appreciate that, and that will continue to be a very dynamic debate.
The last point I want to mention—if you want to react to this—is that we have a buyer/seller forum every March in Edmonton, and the effort there includes every province, every territory, six U.S. states, and five countries. We're having some employment challenges now in Alberta, but the view there was not for everybody to move to Alberta; the view there was to move the work out of Alberta to sort of get the supply chain working, especially across the country. I had colleagues from Peterborough and St. Catharines come. Now, 18 companies from Peterborough are accessing contracts from the province of Alberta. So this is not people uprooting and moving; it's sort of uprooting the work and moving it over here. I think that's something we should certainly look at.
I don't know if you or your union have looked at that in terms of areas of very high regional unemployment, like Windsor, and how they can partner with areas even like my home riding of Edmonton—Leduc in doing the work here but forming those partnerships back and forth. It's something you should encourage both your union and your regional economic development agency to look at.