I didn't mention them because I didn't think the issues were as large for the federal government as the Alberta government. On the idea, for example, of Alberta potentially adopting a sales tax or making better use of its heritage fund, the situation would seem to call for a much more...I don't want to use the word “dramatic”, but a much more fundamental response from the Alberta government. I don't think there's the implication in this that the federal government needs to fundamentally re-evaluate its strategies. Not that much money is implicated here for the federal government.
I'll just get back to your previous question about the interprovincial aspect; that's something that has bedevilled StatsCan. How many people working in Alberta fly out from Newfoundland? We really have no way of measuring that. It's something we discuss internally a great deal. If in the survey week, you're in Alberta, and we catch you there, and you answer the survey, well, you're down as Alberta. If we capture you in Newfoundland, in your off-week, we just ask, “Do you have a full-time job?” If you say yes, then you're going to show up as employed in Newfoundland. It creates real problems for statistics, and statistics aren't as nice and cut and dried as a lot of people think. It's a messy business out there.