It's a good question. I think the best way to answer it is to point out that our infrastructure plan is a significant plan. It's a plan that includes a significant amount of funding in the buckets that I talked about in the last response. It also includes the Canada infrastructure bank where $15 billion of the funding will be, and where $20 billion of repayable capital will be as well.
There will be some projects that will absolutely be perfect for the infrastructure bank. There will be many projects, infrastructure approaches, that will not be appropriate for that bank because they won't be big enough to have the potential to be attractive to pension funds.
Over the last few days I've spoken to a huge number of mayors across the country, in Edmonton, Calgary, Montreal, Quebec, Toronto, Ottawa. They've all been very enthused not only because they can see those transformational projects but also because they realize that if they can get at those transformational projects in a way that allows them to access other sources of funding, it will leave them more funding to do what they might need to do, whether it's to repair the snowplow fleet or other things that of course municipalities will have to do.
We see this as an additive to our impact on the economy. It'll have a huge impact on municipalities because it will give them more capacity to do more things that they need to do for citizens.