I think somebody mentioned they didn't like tax credits—I think it was Mr. Corak—and I was suspect for a few years as well, but we did have tremendous success with tax credits as ridership went up after we introduced the tax credit on transit passes. I wanted to mention that, because we did see empirical evidence to prove that.
I want to spend the last two minutes of my time on aboriginal Canadians. I'm from Fort McMurray. There has been tremendous success in my communities. We have five bands involved in the aboriginal groups that work specifically in the oil sands, and we now have Dave Tuccaro, who is the richest aboriginal in Canada—I think has somewhere over $100 million in personal wealth—and we have a lot of aboriginals who work in the oil sands at Syncrude and Suncor. At Syncrude, I think it's 15% or 14%, and about 9% at Suncor.
This is an open-ended question. Do you see a successful correlation between aboriginal Canadians' successes and the resource sector? Because that's what seems to be driving the wealth of many aboriginal Canadians, and of course most aboriginal Canadians who live on reserves live in isolated areas where resource booms are happening. So do you see the correlation that opening up the resource boom will help the most vulnerable people?
Mr. Holden, maybe you could comment on that?