You're absolutely right, and the other thing Amazon said was that it was looking for a region with good mass transit. When we look around the world and see who's doing it best, we see airports that have co-branded or co-located their airports with ground transportation networks. When you're thinking about connecting people to jobs, from where they live to where they need to work, and you think about the role Pearson's location has played in the massive growth in the western GTA, it's not surprising that a number of businesses have located around Pearson.
Airports around the world are magnets for head offices of companies to locate and that's no different at Pearson. We're smack dab in the middle of a region that runs not just to the western edge of Toronto anymore but to Kitchener-Waterloo as part of the Toronto-Waterloo innovation corridor. There's a role to play in moving people in that corridor more effectively.
