I'll speak to that question and to the one that Mr. MacKinnon asked earlier about how things are working.
We simply use the county of Lethbridge, and I'll use that example simply because I'm quite aware of their financial situation. I've done a lot of research on their financial statements, and it is an area of the province that has a lot of cattle feeding in it. There are over a half a million head in that county alone.
The county receives from the federal gas tax fund about half a million dollars annually. In the view of the farmer and the cattle feeder, when you look at that $500,000 and stack that up to what the farmers are actually paying in federal and provincial fuel tax, you see it is essentially a pittance. We have a situation now where, for example—this is Alberta, not federal—the Alberta government put in a new 4¢ fuel tax. The farmers are now paying that and they're saying, “We're paying it, but what of that is going to come back to the county?” It will be little to nothing, I would submit.
The fuel tax sharing agreement is a good agreement. It works well for municipalities. I think it can work better. It can work better for rural municipalities. Right now those funds are shared on a per capita basis. If sharing were done on a fuel consumption basis, counties like Lethbridge would receive a greater share of those dollars. Given that there is no public transit in the county, fuel is used for farming and harvesting and all sorts of production. That would probably be a better system as far as rural municipalities are concerned.
I would just end with this last comment. Federally, the county of Lethbridge receives a half a million dollars per year, roughly, as its share of the national gas tax fund. Aside from that, there are no other projects in that county that are being funded with federal infrastructure dollars that we know of—none. That's an interesting finding because that county is one of the nation's most productive agricultural areas. They trade internationally around the globe. Billions upon billions of dollars of agricultural product is coming out of that region. We contend it's a national economic priority. We contend that those local roads and bridges, although they are under the purview of the municipality, serve a national interest in terms of agriculture's contribution to the economy.