Right. Okay.
Thank you for your comments on that. Right now it does remain a case for unsolved mysteries, and hopefully we can solve the riddle at some point, all of us together.
My next question is for the Surety Association of Canada. We had the Strandherd-Armstrong bridge construction in my riding. The general contractor went broke. A bonding company stepped in and picked up the cost, and taxpayers were generally protected as a result. The government now proposes something called an infrastructure bank, which would provide loan guarantees, subordinated equity and other measures that protect investors against losses.
How will this work? For example, in the event that the Strandherd-Armstrong bridge in my riding had been infrastructure bank-backed, who would have paid the extra cost of the bankruptcy, the extra cost of the delays and the penalties that came along with those delays? Who would have paid that, if it had been a government-backed risk?