I don't have the dollar amounts. That example is straight across the province.
One of the things I said when this started was that we have people living in Charlottetown who work in a federal government job in Summerside, and we have people living in Summerside working in a federal government job in Charlottetown, and they criss-cross each other on the road.
We have a unique situation in Prince Edward Island where there's no industry, as I said, that creates more work for folks, and there's one area in the province that says you have more access to jobs. Right across the province, we have people working in the same job who live side by side, as you have said. It's everywhere; it's in every industry.
For the seasonal workers in the city of Charlottetown, they got hit in 2012 with a loss of weeks, with a loss of benefits, and then in 2014 they got hit again simply because of where they lived. I would ask for some folks, certainly in the Liberal caucus, to really take a look at why that zone was put in place. It was political in nature, and it's really unfortunate, because it's....
One thing I would like to mention is that the new MP in the Egmont riding has fully supported repealing that zone change, even though every one of his constituents benefit, because he has constituents walking into his office who say, “It's unfair that my fellow Islander is being mistreated, and we want it changed.”
Now having said that, all of the 2012 changes have to be repealed in order for that to happen.